UlienUlien makes her excuses and gets up to leave. The compartment door slides open, releasing in air that's just a little less heated. For the other passengers, a reminder that the luxury they're currently enjoying will not last.
The corridor outside is narrow and utilitarian by most standards. Fur pelts line the walls and a thick woolen carpet covers the floor. The floor heating offers faint warmth through her boots. These necessary additions bring a survivalist kind of beauty and comfort to what would otherwise be bare wooden walls and floor. A kelper's broad flat skull has been mounted above the nearest doorway as some sort of decoration. Faint voices carry through the two compartment doors - hers and the one opposite. The mood in the other compartment sounds to be quite a bit more jovial or drunken than in hers.
The corridor ends in a locked door to a staff car on the left. Beyond it lay the coal wagons and the monstrously powerful steam engine that drives this enormous machine. To the right, there's another sitting compartment, then the standing cars, where those passengers without the means to pay or fight for a seated compartment are packed together, shivering and uncomfortable, only able to stretch their feet when the train makes a stop. Even tough Rimers can't claim to particularly enjoy those hellish conditions.
A woman in staff uniform - heavy greatcoats that make them look uniformly big and stocky and cheap-looking white fur hats - stands nearby, inspecting a discreet panel of vials and gauges on the wall. She looks to be about in her thirties, taking into account the way Rime life ages everyone prematurely, with stern and thin features. There are bags under her eyes. She glances your way when you exit.
'Washrooms are at the end of the corridor on the left, ma'am,' she says.
'Heating's not on, I'm afraid. No fuel to spare. Company policy, you understand...'This could be the woman who was speaking earlier. At the least, you only heard one person leave. There's no sign of them, whoever that was.
***
The CompartmentFiona's tale draws the cattle baron's interest once more.
'Now, that sounds like you've got Rimer spirit already, miss. That's the wonder of this place. Always somewhere to start over again,' he says, with the self-satisfied smile of man having their life philosophy vindicated.
'I must beg your pardon. I don't care much for Inner cuisine, but I reckon I could use someone like you in my kitchens. Take my card - if you should ever happen to find yourself 'round Shoal-ways.'He puts another one of his business cards in Fiona's palm.
'Maybe that'd make Mr Lowe real happy too, no?'The bodyguard doesn't respond, but looks somewhat scandalized. He peers out of the window with newfound interest quite unworthy of the bleak frozen landscape.
***