Low risk, high reward.Closed to James Carpenter
That was how Dr. Ozymandias (lovingly called Ozzy) had described the potential heist at Carpenter Corp. He had also said that it had very little visible security, but that there were rumours of potentially highly profitable items out of sight. That wasn’t really how Jameson thought. He tended to tackle places that looked like they had something he might want. Jewel stores, obvious chemical factories that made volatile and dangerous substances behind closed doors. He wasn’t really an idea guy, not in that way at least. He was the sort who stuck to something and became good at it through bumbling his way through and figuring out what worked by repeatedly making mistakes and then eventually finding a nice long streak of good luck.
He also tended to take Ozzy’s advice because the former psychotherapist turned thrall had his ear to the ground about that sort of thing, where Jameson tended to hide himself away for days at a time tinkering with new gadgets (his latest obsession), binging on blood, weed (usually at the same time), and chocolate covered pretzels (another obsession). He had been in the middle of working the last tiny screw into a pair of cuffs when he’d gotten the notification on his pager. It was the sort still occasionally used in hospitals, but which had fallen out of wider general use since the invention of the cellphone. Slightly more primitive technology, and for that reason beneath the radar. It had a set of grid co-ordinates, which lined up to a specific building on Harper Rock’s map.
Jameson didn’t bother at the time if only because he’d been doing delicate work, a pair of stolen watch maker’s glasses strapped to his head. He had only just modified the magnification with a few lenses and was squinting through them, so it hadn’t seemed practical to put his latest toy down.
An hour later though, he was ready to go.
In that time, he’d put Ozzy on speaker whilst getting dressed, so the man could brief him on the exact details. By the time Jameson was done strapping his utility belt on, he looked significantly more like a professional thief than he had when he’d first started breaking and entering a few weeks before. He probably could have stuck to shitty little stores with only a little bit of good merch and bad security, but he’d found almost immediately that he loved the rush he got when he made it out of a high stakes game with something valuable in hand. It was why he wasn’t exactly sure about this Carpenter Corp place. Less protected didn’t necessarily mean better, devil-may-care as that might have been as a life philosophy.
He got to the building a short time later, his night vision goggles slipped into place right as he was entering. They had been purchase off of one of the many black market rings that seemed to thrive in Harper Rock, and then heavily modified to pick up heat signatures. They could swap to normal vision in a pinch, if there was a sudden burst of light, and were wired directly to self-combusting motion sensors that were dispensed by one of the cuffs he had made only just that night. He felt a little over-dressed for what it was, but he figured the location would provide for a nice dry run of his latest gear. Better to have hiccups somewhere where the stakes weren’t so high than when he was in the middle of trying to lift the Hope Diamond.
He also wore a cat suit made from a polymer that negated his already minimal heat signature and didn’t transfer fingerprints. It was heat and tear resistant, as well as durable. It zipped up from his groin and was pitch black so as to blend into the darkness well. There were sensors in the fingertips that made picking mechanical locks easier. Over that he wore a comfortable pair of sneakers (because running the **** away was an important part of his job), a hoodie to cover his hair and obscure his features, and a pair of Bluetooth headphones loaded for the moment with Pink and Bon Jovi.
His utility belt had quick dispense pouches for knockout and smoke bombs as well as BnE scramblers in a pouch on one hip, and a false alarm on the other hip to balance the weight out. Attached to the belt were a multi-tool (glass cutter, screwdriver, wrench etc), adhesive spray, and a mister. He wore a backpack which essentially just contained a deck of tarot cards comprised only of The Hanged Man (his signature), and a rope with a hook at the end. Most of the space there was devoted to whatever he planned to steal. A necklace of occultation hung around his neck, and his cuffs themselves had a trigger that either popped a concealable blade or miniature automatic weapon into his hand. He had only ever had to use them a couple of times, but he liked having options when he was face with a bad situation.
When he got inside, it was almost exactly as Ozzy had described it. The problem was that Jameson had no clue what was of any worth. “WOAH we’re halfway there! Woahhhh, livin on a prayer!” He didn’t see much need to be careful (not that it would have stopped him from singing even if he did, or at least humming). He quickly nabbed a few things that looked like they were both high tech and like they could fit into his backpack. If it turned out to be a bust, he would find out later. For the moment, they could go into his loot room, which was essentially an enormous pile of stuff he’d collected that he had yet to sell (really it had sprawled out of the room and dotted his entire apartment by this point).
He was gone as quickly a he’d come.