“It will not be long before we are able to return the galaxy to the proper governance, Governor Tarkin,” Enric Pryde oozed as much confidence as he did fanaticism. The Lieutenant-General of the First Order stood aside the General, Armitage Hux, within the confines of a conference room from where Kylo Ren was barred entry.
Per her request.
Governor Damia Tarkin looked upon the holograph of Starkiller base with perhaps the best damn poker face she’d ever been forced to wear in her life. Subtle interest was reflected in raised brows.
“With this weapon, we will destroy not merely one planet, but the entire Hosnian system, without ever moving close. They will not know where the strikes came from. The Core will fall, and we will rapidly take the rest of the Republic out from under them to install an Empire. And your work—”
“Her work,” Armitage butted in, and Damia shifted her eyes to him.
They were almost a pair – both red heads, both with blue eyes, but where hers were an ocean, his were an ice field. His hair lighter, hers darker.
Yet in casting, he was the villain here, and his ice had never melted under her name, nor did it melt under gaze, “has put the First Order back, often,” Armitage reminded.
“She has insisted on allowing the First Order a voice in the Senate, General,” Pryde shifted, clearly disliking he had to answer to someone far younger than him, and without such a name, or upbringing, as he had. “She has done many things to try and give us inroads.”
‘Actually, I was trying to make your lives harder with that, and expose you all to the Senate so they might do something about your organization.’ Damia didn’t say that, but nodded along with what Pryde assumed.
“I admit my actions may have appeared to be contradictory to you, and in truth it has been. I have been undecided as to whether or not to throw my support behind the First Order. However, seeing what I have seen now, I see you understand the Tarkin Doctrine well,” a subtle smirk touched her lips, “I will take the offer to see Starkiller Base in person. Tomorrow, then?”
“Tomorrow,” Pryde agreed, “from there, I can escort you to our Supreme Leader where your alliance can be finalized and documented.”
Damia nodded, “I look forward to meeting the Supreme Leader,” she did not. The last thing she needed was another force bastard trying to break her mind. She’d practiced plenty with interrogation droids, but she’d never had the true displeasure of being exposed to a force user, and she didn’t want to find out all that practice of training her mind was for naught. She knew it had worked for Leia Organa – she withstood Darth Vader – but then, of course, Leia also held the Force.
An advantage that Damia lacked.
“For now, I would like to rest a bit, and perhaps find some food?”
“Of course,” Pryde moved for the door, “there is a cafeteria not far from here,” they stepped into the hall, “just down there—”
“—take a right turn, and then another. I am quite familiar with the build of capital ships,” Damia actually had the schematics of the Finalizer leaked, but Pryde didn’t need to know that. Nor Armitage, though she could feel the heat of his glare, the pounding of a thousand questions in his head.
Her name protected her, but only just.
“In case you get lost finding your way to your quarters,” Armitage spoke up, “you,” he snapped at a Stormtrooper in the hall, who looked a bit out of it, “What is your designation?”
“Uh—FN-2187, Sir.”
“Escort Governor Tarkin to where she needs to be, and see to it she returns to her room.”
“That is hardly necessary—” Enric tried to protest.
“Perhaps on your ship, but I will not allow civilians to roam freely.”
Damia managed not to smile. Oh, she adored how paranoid Armitage was. She adored the conflicts in the ranks. Sure, it made her life significantly more difficult, but she could still work with it.
“I understand,” Damia said, “I would do the same were this my ship,” she accepted it readily, “Shall we, FN-2187?”
“R-right,” he seemed a bit out of it, but stepped up to take charge of his new directive, and he initially took the lead. Once they took that right turn, away from Pryde and Hux, however, Tarkin cut ahead. “Uh, your room is….”
“First I am going where I need to be,” Damia parroted those horribly vague words at the Stormtrooper, “General Hux is allowing me the honor of visiting Commander Dameron to see him escorted to a proper cell, now that interrogations are done. We have a bit of a history.”
She’d never seen the man before in her life, but her spies leaked that he was here, and of high value to General Organa. She had arrived to save him. Now, of course, she considered disregarding that, and going to Starkiller to sabotage it, but…well, no. Somehow, if she was going to tell the galaxy about Starkiller, she needed the backing of Organa.
Who was going to listen to a Tarkin warning about a planet destroyer, when she so casually threatened using one herself?
“Oh! I know where that is!” The Stormtrooper perked up for some reason, and though she knew where she was going, she let him lead, “What’s your uh, history, with him? What’s he like?”
“Oh, the typical rebel scum,” she said, making up bullshit on the spot, “cocky flyboy who thinks he knows better than everyone else, but he’s only good at escaping. Well, until now,” they arrived at the cell, with only a single trooper on guard duty.
Damia grinned at the Trooper, as FN-2187 turned to them, “General Hux wants the prisoner moved.”
Damia disregarded the conversation, except to acknowledge the, “Affirmative,” that would allow her to undo the bindings that held the prisoner who looked like he’d been through hell and back – and though there would likely be no personal recognition from him, she suspected her olive not-quite Imperial uniform style would be enough to earn that initial sneer as she approached with a too-cocky grin.
“Well, well, Dameron, finally got yourself caught, I see,” she chuckled, reaching back for binders and finding the weight of it fall into her hand from FN-2187, “Seems you also told everything as they’re sending you up for execution, but at least you don’t have to waste away in an interrogation chair, so be a good boy,” she placed one hand on the release mechanism, leaning over him to whisper, “and pretend you hate me or neither of us are getting back to General Organa.”
She’d flick the release.
And notice the shadow of FN-2187 raise the butt of his gun to strike her, the other Trooper already out of the room.
She had just enough time to turn and lift her arm so it hit there, rather than the back of her neck, visibly surprised by the betrayal. How did FN-2187 figure her out? He couldn’t have heard the whisper, right?
~***~
General Armitage Hux watched FN-2187 leave with Governor Tarkin for only a second, before he let his attention guide him in the opposite direction. Enric Pryde chose to stride alongside him, much to his irritation. “Should you not be preparing for your departure in the morning?”
The sooner Enric was gone, the better.
If only he could take Kylo Ren with him, but no, Ren was going to be tearing Jakku apart, and Hux had to wait above the planet for the droid to be found, all to locate some Jedi who didn’t want to be found. They ought to just leave Luke in peace. They ought to do so many other things than waste valuable time and resources on this damnable mission of Ren’s.
But no.
Snoke wanted Luke found, too, so here they were.
“Preparations are being done as we speak, General Hux,” Pryde said, calm as ever, though that fanaticism didn’t fade, “You nearly lost us a great alliance, General. Are you aware of the many who follow Governor Tarkin’s every word?”
‘Yes, I’m listening to one such sycophant.’
Armitage bit that insult back, “I am aware of the sway she has, and I am aware of the way she has used it. You give too much credit to her name, Lieutenant-General, and not enough to her actions.”
“I believe you do not understand politics, General.”
‘I understand more than you.’ He played enough petty politics in the First Order, when such a thing shouldn’t be necessary. It should have all been about merit, but no, it wasn’t. Nepotism and favoritism ran rampant. Some would claim he was no exception, but he knew better. His father hated him. He was a bastard.
He earned his position, clawed it right out of his father’s hands, and made sure Snoke saw him for what he was, and how capable he was. They wouldn’t have Starkiller without him, and now he felt that was at risk, even if he couldn’t place it. He didn’t trust Damia Tarkin. She had been…too calm.
Too poised.
Too certain.
It was in stark contrast to how certain she had been she would never join the First Order.
Something Pryde was conveniently forgetting.
“I will admit to not having played them in the Senate, Lieutenant-General, but I will not claim ignorance as to how they are played. Their deceptive nature is precisely the reason we are poised to bring it to an end, and you would do well to remember all politicians are liars,” the General reminded, “If you will excuse me, I have business in the control center,” he needed to stay up to date on anything found on Jakku.
“Of course,” Pryde stepped back, and took another route, allowing Armitage to continue his path.
He could feel a headache coming on.
Per her request.
Governor Damia Tarkin looked upon the holograph of Starkiller base with perhaps the best damn poker face she’d ever been forced to wear in her life. Subtle interest was reflected in raised brows.
“With this weapon, we will destroy not merely one planet, but the entire Hosnian system, without ever moving close. They will not know where the strikes came from. The Core will fall, and we will rapidly take the rest of the Republic out from under them to install an Empire. And your work—”
“Her work,” Armitage butted in, and Damia shifted her eyes to him.
They were almost a pair – both red heads, both with blue eyes, but where hers were an ocean, his were an ice field. His hair lighter, hers darker.
Yet in casting, he was the villain here, and his ice had never melted under her name, nor did it melt under gaze, “has put the First Order back, often,” Armitage reminded.
“She has insisted on allowing the First Order a voice in the Senate, General,” Pryde shifted, clearly disliking he had to answer to someone far younger than him, and without such a name, or upbringing, as he had. “She has done many things to try and give us inroads.”
‘Actually, I was trying to make your lives harder with that, and expose you all to the Senate so they might do something about your organization.’ Damia didn’t say that, but nodded along with what Pryde assumed.
“I admit my actions may have appeared to be contradictory to you, and in truth it has been. I have been undecided as to whether or not to throw my support behind the First Order. However, seeing what I have seen now, I see you understand the Tarkin Doctrine well,” a subtle smirk touched her lips, “I will take the offer to see Starkiller Base in person. Tomorrow, then?”
“Tomorrow,” Pryde agreed, “from there, I can escort you to our Supreme Leader where your alliance can be finalized and documented.”
Damia nodded, “I look forward to meeting the Supreme Leader,” she did not. The last thing she needed was another force bastard trying to break her mind. She’d practiced plenty with interrogation droids, but she’d never had the true displeasure of being exposed to a force user, and she didn’t want to find out all that practice of training her mind was for naught. She knew it had worked for Leia Organa – she withstood Darth Vader – but then, of course, Leia also held the Force.
An advantage that Damia lacked.
“For now, I would like to rest a bit, and perhaps find some food?”
“Of course,” Pryde moved for the door, “there is a cafeteria not far from here,” they stepped into the hall, “just down there—”
“—take a right turn, and then another. I am quite familiar with the build of capital ships,” Damia actually had the schematics of the Finalizer leaked, but Pryde didn’t need to know that. Nor Armitage, though she could feel the heat of his glare, the pounding of a thousand questions in his head.
Her name protected her, but only just.
“In case you get lost finding your way to your quarters,” Armitage spoke up, “you,” he snapped at a Stormtrooper in the hall, who looked a bit out of it, “What is your designation?”
“Uh—FN-2187, Sir.”
“Escort Governor Tarkin to where she needs to be, and see to it she returns to her room.”
“That is hardly necessary—” Enric tried to protest.
“Perhaps on your ship, but I will not allow civilians to roam freely.”
Damia managed not to smile. Oh, she adored how paranoid Armitage was. She adored the conflicts in the ranks. Sure, it made her life significantly more difficult, but she could still work with it.
“I understand,” Damia said, “I would do the same were this my ship,” she accepted it readily, “Shall we, FN-2187?”
“R-right,” he seemed a bit out of it, but stepped up to take charge of his new directive, and he initially took the lead. Once they took that right turn, away from Pryde and Hux, however, Tarkin cut ahead. “Uh, your room is….”
“First I am going where I need to be,” Damia parroted those horribly vague words at the Stormtrooper, “General Hux is allowing me the honor of visiting Commander Dameron to see him escorted to a proper cell, now that interrogations are done. We have a bit of a history.”
She’d never seen the man before in her life, but her spies leaked that he was here, and of high value to General Organa. She had arrived to save him. Now, of course, she considered disregarding that, and going to Starkiller to sabotage it, but…well, no. Somehow, if she was going to tell the galaxy about Starkiller, she needed the backing of Organa.
Who was going to listen to a Tarkin warning about a planet destroyer, when she so casually threatened using one herself?
“Oh! I know where that is!” The Stormtrooper perked up for some reason, and though she knew where she was going, she let him lead, “What’s your uh, history, with him? What’s he like?”
“Oh, the typical rebel scum,” she said, making up bullshit on the spot, “cocky flyboy who thinks he knows better than everyone else, but he’s only good at escaping. Well, until now,” they arrived at the cell, with only a single trooper on guard duty.
Damia grinned at the Trooper, as FN-2187 turned to them, “General Hux wants the prisoner moved.”
Damia disregarded the conversation, except to acknowledge the, “Affirmative,” that would allow her to undo the bindings that held the prisoner who looked like he’d been through hell and back – and though there would likely be no personal recognition from him, she suspected her olive not-quite Imperial uniform style would be enough to earn that initial sneer as she approached with a too-cocky grin.
“Well, well, Dameron, finally got yourself caught, I see,” she chuckled, reaching back for binders and finding the weight of it fall into her hand from FN-2187, “Seems you also told everything as they’re sending you up for execution, but at least you don’t have to waste away in an interrogation chair, so be a good boy,” she placed one hand on the release mechanism, leaning over him to whisper, “and pretend you hate me or neither of us are getting back to General Organa.”
She’d flick the release.
And notice the shadow of FN-2187 raise the butt of his gun to strike her, the other Trooper already out of the room.
She had just enough time to turn and lift her arm so it hit there, rather than the back of her neck, visibly surprised by the betrayal. How did FN-2187 figure her out? He couldn’t have heard the whisper, right?
~***~
General Armitage Hux watched FN-2187 leave with Governor Tarkin for only a second, before he let his attention guide him in the opposite direction. Enric Pryde chose to stride alongside him, much to his irritation. “Should you not be preparing for your departure in the morning?”
The sooner Enric was gone, the better.
If only he could take Kylo Ren with him, but no, Ren was going to be tearing Jakku apart, and Hux had to wait above the planet for the droid to be found, all to locate some Jedi who didn’t want to be found. They ought to just leave Luke in peace. They ought to do so many other things than waste valuable time and resources on this damnable mission of Ren’s.
But no.
Snoke wanted Luke found, too, so here they were.
“Preparations are being done as we speak, General Hux,” Pryde said, calm as ever, though that fanaticism didn’t fade, “You nearly lost us a great alliance, General. Are you aware of the many who follow Governor Tarkin’s every word?”
‘Yes, I’m listening to one such sycophant.’
Armitage bit that insult back, “I am aware of the sway she has, and I am aware of the way she has used it. You give too much credit to her name, Lieutenant-General, and not enough to her actions.”
“I believe you do not understand politics, General.”
‘I understand more than you.’ He played enough petty politics in the First Order, when such a thing shouldn’t be necessary. It should have all been about merit, but no, it wasn’t. Nepotism and favoritism ran rampant. Some would claim he was no exception, but he knew better. His father hated him. He was a bastard.
He earned his position, clawed it right out of his father’s hands, and made sure Snoke saw him for what he was, and how capable he was. They wouldn’t have Starkiller without him, and now he felt that was at risk, even if he couldn’t place it. He didn’t trust Damia Tarkin. She had been…too calm.
Too poised.
Too certain.
It was in stark contrast to how certain she had been she would never join the First Order.
Something Pryde was conveniently forgetting.
“I will admit to not having played them in the Senate, Lieutenant-General, but I will not claim ignorance as to how they are played. Their deceptive nature is precisely the reason we are poised to bring it to an end, and you would do well to remember all politicians are liars,” the General reminded, “If you will excuse me, I have business in the control center,” he needed to stay up to date on anything found on Jakku.
“Of course,” Pryde stepped back, and took another route, allowing Armitage to continue his path.
He could feel a headache coming on.