Glade 20th, 4622
“There are no longer any supplies, Vesper. You were meant to make a profit… I haven’t received any revenue from any of your inventions thus far, cat…” Billowing smoke wafted towards the feline, who leered, nares flaring beneath the faintly cedar tingling aroma.
There was a moment of quiet, mind circling on potentialities. “Yes, brother…” he spoke distantly. “Then I will obtain my own materials henceforth. I have finished preparations for the first part of our plan. Investment can take much time before farthings rain.” He turned his head, blinking in that same motion as those piercing green eyes store down the smoking, indifferent spymaster that funded him. The man who first greeted him when he became Corvo.
“I have made the lathe,” said Vesper. “Guns are next. For each of my brothers; I promise you. We will take Amoren and puppeteer the despots to finance and protect the goals of Scaeva. Do not lose sight of that.” He put his mittens into the pockets of his pettycoat and bowed with his beret, shrugging as the man just smoked in silence.
Silence was acceptance.
Delving his quarters, Vesper tossed all of import into a sleek leather briefcase. Papers and tools, and the hard metal cases they resided in were carefully tucked away within. Then, a few outfits worth of clothes. Vesper sorted and organized as best he could before packing his backpack with sundries and food.
Loaded up and kitted out, the kit-cat wrote a few letters to correspond his absence and then handed them off to a brother for deliverance before setting out into the noble quarter. “Transportation,” he mumbled to himself beneath the glaring sun, beret casting a shadow over his dark-furred face.
“The train to Ciseperant may yield a favorable intersection for foot travel. I do so hate the wastes of the Badlands, but a job is a job.”
”No, no. The train… the drama. I am not a creature suitable for public transit now, not since Arkash…” He shut his eyes and sighed.
“Wagon it is,” griped the small cat as he headed for the commoner quarter, passing by Halamire guards who checked his credentials and searched his things. “Where are the inter-regional wagons gathered?” he asked them, and they pointed him to a frankly run down inn for merchants with several wagons outside.
After nearly an hour of negotiations, Vesper was weary and frustrated; nobody would take him to even the edge of the Badlands, let alone across the wastes to explore those ruins. Not for any reasonable price.
As he left, Vesper leaned against the post beneath the awning in thought, arms crossed, biting one of his dark lips with those pearly white teeth. His eyes were beset upon the city… would he have to walk? He’d done it before.