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Sometimes, in the flight from a planet or a mission, it's handy to have a real pilot around.
Cassian is competent. But not much more than that -- a quick hand at navigation, but honestly never quite managed the fluidity in commanding a ship that really good pilots took for granted.
So, no complaints from him as he crosses the tarmac, steps up the ramp of the tiny ship that he doesn't even know the name of, and slides his bag off his shoulder. A glance confirms that Dameron is already there, running through preflight, and Cassian joins him, after stowing the mission materials.
Dameron. Not who Cassian would have picked to be his partner on an assassination. But easily the best pilot in the Resistance, and that's some reassurance when they're going to be picking their way out through a thick double-ring around the planet, crawling with First Order sensors. The way in will be clear, obviously; the way out will have to be disguised, and that's where the rings come in.
Cassian is curt and quiet during the ride in. They get a landing site in a paved field, crowded. There's a local festival going on, one that requires the planetary governor to make an appearance. The governor is a First Order loyalist, handing his planet over gladly to the hands of stormtroopers.
"Stay here," orders Cassian, once they're down. He shrugs on a parka, since the wind outside is bitter and cold, and snow has started to fall. "I'll be back in four hours, no more. If I tell you, or if you don't hear from me for more than that, you take off. You go." No need to get them both killed if Cassian bungles this. "When I say, you get the ship ready to go."
Dameron doesn't even know what Cassian is here to do. Operational security.
He slips out and into the crowd.
In fact, it's three hours later (after he's moved through the crowd, dodged the additional security, overwhelmed with the influx; after he found his vantage point and fired a handful of shots, left behind the evidence to frame one of the planetary factions) that he returns. The spirit of the place has turned quickly from beehive to hornet's nest, and Cassian is breathless from the run when he ducks back inside.
"Go," he snaps, "now, go." He slams the ramp control, and shucks off the parka. Chaos scares people; there are already a handful of ships fleeing, and they haven't gotten the port shut down yet. They might not be able to, given the huge additional numbers of ships that are there for the occasion.
Cassian is competent. But not much more than that -- a quick hand at navigation, but honestly never quite managed the fluidity in commanding a ship that really good pilots took for granted.
So, no complaints from him as he crosses the tarmac, steps up the ramp of the tiny ship that he doesn't even know the name of, and slides his bag off his shoulder. A glance confirms that Dameron is already there, running through preflight, and Cassian joins him, after stowing the mission materials.
Dameron. Not who Cassian would have picked to be his partner on an assassination. But easily the best pilot in the Resistance, and that's some reassurance when they're going to be picking their way out through a thick double-ring around the planet, crawling with First Order sensors. The way in will be clear, obviously; the way out will have to be disguised, and that's where the rings come in.
Cassian is curt and quiet during the ride in. They get a landing site in a paved field, crowded. There's a local festival going on, one that requires the planetary governor to make an appearance. The governor is a First Order loyalist, handing his planet over gladly to the hands of stormtroopers.
"Stay here," orders Cassian, once they're down. He shrugs on a parka, since the wind outside is bitter and cold, and snow has started to fall. "I'll be back in four hours, no more. If I tell you, or if you don't hear from me for more than that, you take off. You go." No need to get them both killed if Cassian bungles this. "When I say, you get the ship ready to go."
Dameron doesn't even know what Cassian is here to do. Operational security.
He slips out and into the crowd.
In fact, it's three hours later (after he's moved through the crowd, dodged the additional security, overwhelmed with the influx; after he found his vantage point and fired a handful of shots, left behind the evidence to frame one of the planetary factions) that he returns. The spirit of the place has turned quickly from beehive to hornet's nest, and Cassian is breathless from the run when he ducks back inside.
"Go," he snaps, "now, go." He slams the ramp control, and shucks off the parka. Chaos scares people; there are already a handful of ships fleeing, and they haven't gotten the port shut down yet. They might not be able to, given the huge additional numbers of ships that are there for the occasion.
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For now. Cassian agrees.
It's a mistake to think that the First Order doesn't have gifted, talented, and innovative ship captains, especially the ones that end up in charge of Star Destroyers. The Empire was different; as far as he heard, the captains who got promoted in the later years especially were the ones who played the political game. Had patrons, had people in power advocating for them. The First Order's power structure is still fresh, no matter how long ago it was that their burgeoning forces wiped out Cassian's family. There's still room for advancement for anyone quick enough, smart enough, ruthless enough to get that far.
Which means... it may not be very long at all. Or this captain might be a gambler, holding out for a big score rather than taking a safer bet.
"Which would you rather?" he asks.
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They're about as close to the heart of the ring as Poe wants to be. Any closer, and he's going to need to trim their speed, and with two dozen eyeballs almost on their tail he's more interested in keeping their options open. "I'd rather those TIEs be competing to deliver their heartfelt sentiments -- y'know, fistfuls of blueblossoms and palomellas, passionate love letters for the charming pilot and his roguishly handsome companion. Recognition of prior stupidity; promises to stop ruining lives. Otherwise?"
The ship slips between two small asteroids locked in a collision course. "Better hope they're hopeful. This ain't anything to worry about, but if that Star Destroyer starts breaking up some of these rocks, we're in for a rough ride."
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Just one question, and Dameron's off, stream of consciousness.
The way he's flying -- absolutely efficient, not a wasted motion, and when Cassian thinks of that, he tends to think of, for example, the purely mechanical flight that K2 practices. This is nothing like that. A long time ago, Cassian spent a lot of time on mountaintops, watching, gathering intelligence, and on those mountaintops were birds. Gorgeous things, huge wingspan, sharp beaks, and these fiercely intelligent eyes that, somehow, never made Cassian feel particularly uneasy. Those birds were predators. They didn't fly for the joy of it, for the freedom of stretching their wings. They flew for one perfect, deadly purpose, and no motion was wasted. Everything finely calculated.
Cassian has a feeling that Dameron would fly for the joy of it. But this, right now, is more like those predators -- birds with wings wider than Cassian was tall, that could fly in the ten-centimeter gap between Cassian and a rock wall, barely brushing him with a folded wing as they went by.
Dameron is, in fact, reacting to obstacles before Cassian even perceives them. Four moves ahead, all the time. Cassian would have a hard time just keeping track of what Dameron is doing and keeping up a conversation at the same time. Dameron just chatters away.
Cassian laughs, soft and disbelieving. "Roguishly handsome," he echoes. His accent is a little stronger when he's under stress. "Don't tell me you're keeping another companion in the storage net." A joke; but, in fact, Cassian doesn't really consider himself handsome. He's not really one thing or the other. Not short, not tall; not Republic, not Rim; not a soldier, not a spy. Not quite handsome, not quite pretty, but maybe a hint of each.
He doesn't use his looks to get what he wants, anyway. It's not out of any moral high ground. It's just that there are much better and more effective ways to find anything he needs to find. Seduction, when necessary, is rarely even about looks, anyway.
I accidentally some words in there - should've been can't help but wonder, haha
Poe says none of this, of course. He's just attempting to break up a stressful moment with gentle teasing -- no need to get carried away.
For a little while, he falls back into silence, dancing the ship through the debris field and grateful to be the one in control as he watches the distance scroll down between them and their tail. And soon enough -- sooner than he'd wanted -- the first streaks of green energy come streaking past their ship, overhead and to starboard. "Well," Poe says at last, and flicks another glance to Andor as he reaches out to activate the Heartline's respectable deflector shields.
The energy pull is every bit as respectable, and he bares his teeth as the ship seems to lag for a moment, before smoothing out once more. "Suppose I was right about those heartfelt sentiments at least, huh?"
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"Seems heartfelt to me."
A dark tone. He really wishes he could do something besides sit here and nurse the hyperdrive.
He bites his lip.
"The longer they chase us," he says, "the longer for innocents on the planet to get clear." Just putting that out there. Every smuggler has romantic notions of navigating a close-in asteroid belt, hiding and losing a tail, but Cassian is starting to think that Dameron might actually be capable of it.
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It's easy enough to suit action to words. Those laser strikes are still wild, but there's definitely more of them now, shearing off chunks and shards of those asteroids -- shearing off, but not obliterating. The larger ones, at least, seem sturdy enough to withstand a TIE's lasers, and Poe breathes out slowly through his nose. It's easier to manage the debris, though it ultimately means a little less opportunity to catch those unshielded starfighters with rocky shrapnel.
The Captain's words catch him by surprise, but Poe doesn't dare look now. Instead, he hums thoughtfully; the Heartline is durable, but it's a repurposed smuggling craft, built to be fast and low-profile, with no weapons to speak of beyond a defensive flare launcher array. "I suppose we could play tag for a while -- chew up those squadrons until we hit our fuel limit."
A pause. Poe's the kind of pilot that crashes in like a tidal wave and smashes the opposition. Grinding TIEs in the teeth of an asteroid belt won't be the hardest thing he's done by lightyears, but he's not certain how much time it'll buy, ultimately. "Which isn't a no," he adds, because the idea of buying any time for people to get clear suits Poe just fine, "but we're looking at ten minutes, maybe eleven before we're gonna need to jump."
Refueling hadn't been on the itinerary, planetside. In this moment, Poe's half-tempted to curse at the oversight.
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Tense silence, and then the numbers finish on the hyperspace computer. "Ready to jump," he says. Slots them into the navigation. All Poe has to do is pull the lever to get them into hyperspace.
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Then again, Poe hasn't been much inclined to argue. In the heartbeats following Andor's announcement, it feels like he's leaving the specifics of their departure to Poe himself.
And then there's no more time to think about those things, because those TIEs are close enough now to take half-decent shots, and it leaves Poe needing to split his attention between the obstacles ahead and TIEs jockeying to maneuver around the ship. He turns the ship on its side once again, and scoots between two larger asteroids; a number of those TIE's sweep around the sides, but one is daring enough to follow through.
It's a mistake, one announced in an explosion to their aft as a solar array scrapes craggy rock and catches there, momentum grabbing the fighter and swinging into the side of the asteroid like a child smashing a toy into a wall.
Poe glances up, sees the underbelly of a pair of TIEs racing ahead of them, arcing high. Not far ahead, the debris is getting thicker, smaller, more dangerous as they near the space where those rings cross. "Thanks for that," Poe says at last. "Guess we'll see if these are any good, huh?"
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But he puts great stock in his instinct. And, instinctively, this feels like a situation where Dameron knows better than Cassian what to do. How to proceed.
They can jump from within the rings, though the odds start crowding up on being yanked back out of hyperspace before getting far. Should pick a vector as clear of space rock as they can, or get out of range of the debris before making the leap.
"The cluster ahead," says Cassian -- "Scattering our sensors." Warning Poe that the obstacles behind it might not be visible, and also telling him that it may increase the confusion among the TIEs.
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A TIE manages a lucky shot on their aft, though the deflector shield absorbs it without a significant drop. Poe twitches the yoke, and the Heartline quickly slips to port, skimming just meters above the battered, sheared-off hull of some sort of freighter as they race for the chaotic expanse ahead. Andor's comment prompts a glance at the board from Poe, as well -- not that he doesn't trust the Captain, but because he wants to know how bad it is.
Not great, but not impossible. "Guess that explains some of the casualties out there," he says, and weaves his way through another span of asteroids, chased by green bolts of energy. To have an effect that size, he supposes some part of one of those moons of long ago must've been loaded with iron ... that, or maybe it's a deterrent of of some sort.
Where his sensors are still functional, another three TIEs have disappeared from the board. "Make 'em pay for it, if they decide to chase us," Poe murmurs. "might send 'em circling the dead zone, waiting for us to come out, too. Buying time, right?"
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Some of the fragments are large, Cassian realizes. Large enough to --
"Land on one," he says, suddenly. "Land, and shut the ship down." The fragments here are orbiting in two different directions -- they'll untangle and the TIEs won't know which cloud to follow. Their attention will be split, and they'll be caught up in hunting in a thicket of rocks. "That one -- there is a hollow." A crater that's deep enough that it's nearly a cave, walled with iron. The hollow means some limited shelter against collisions. Its rotation is relatively slow; not fast enough to be dizzying, and not impossible to match with a few choice maneuvers.
Not for a pilot like Poe Dameron, anyway.
"We'll wait," says Cassian. "The orbit carries us south and starward. From there, almost nothing is in our way on the hyperspace vector. We detach, and jump." Several hours, but if they can pull it off, they can go from engines cold to jump in less than thirty seconds. Not enough time to be caught.
He looks to Poe. His eyes are alight, with the idea, the plan. They can do this.
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"All right," Poe says, glancing at Andor, a little taken aback by the sudden surge of life in his eyes. The sensor board is mostly useless at this point, but the amount of fire has reduced dramatically in the last few moments, and that means plenty -- likely they're mulling over directions, receiving orders from that Star Destroyer on whether to pursue or fan out to wait. "All right." Either way, if they want to do this, there's not much time, and so rather than think too hard about the potential for screwing this up catastrophically, he tries to gauge the speed and angle of the asteroid's rotation, and slips beneath the oversized chunk of rock, switching to retrothrusters in a maneuver that leaves the inertial compensator struggling to keep pace.
He feels terribly vulnerable like this ,but forces himself not to think about that, either, to instead activate the ship's small tractor beam to pull the ship in as he feathers thrust and retrothrust to keep pace with its rotation. He doesn't dare use the spotlight, and the effort feels a little bit like groping in the dark.
It's not a completely elegant landing. The length of the ship means he has to turn it sideways to fit the shape of that narrow crater; as a result, only half of the viewport affords a view of the stars in front of them. One of the landing struts crunches and squeals against an outcrop It's not perfect, not by a long shot, but they're shadowed by a jagged overhang, nestled up tight against the belly of their asteroid. Ready and capable of bolting, if need be.
Poe realizes he's holding his breath as the ship's hum abruptly cuts to silence, as the lights from the consoles bade to darkness. He releases it in a shuddering sigh, then glances to Andor, vaguely curious -- but there's a little bit of pleasure there, too. "Don't suppose you brought any cards along, huh?"
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Silence.
There's nothing like the silence of space. On a planet, the quiet is never quite quiet; there is always a breath of wind, the rustle as it passes through leaves or grass or the hollow sounds it makes over stones and sand. There are birds, there are creatures. On a ship, a functioning ship, there's never quite a silence either. The constant, distant hum of engines, life support; vague hints of people moving through the corridors. Often, voices, distant or proximate.
Silence is never fully silence.
Except here.
A dead, flat quiet. And yet, when Cassian closes his eyes, he can hear the soft sound of Poe breathing. He can hear a hint of strain as the ship grows accustomed to the lack of internal gravity, of the stresses of rotation. He can hear Poe shift, turn his head to look to Cassian.
It's a silence that throws a spotlight on every sound, and casts all else into obscurity.
"No," admits Cassian. "Too bad. I could stand to win a few credits off a pilot."
There's a bunk in the back. Blankets. Cassian undoes the harness holding him to the chair and delicately pushes off from two points. He maneuvers in microgravity with a graceful precision; it's always come easily to him. No up and down, and every limb, every shift of his body, must have a purpose. He floats by the ceiling, one hand flat on the ceiling to arrest his motion, one foot against the wall to keep him steady.
He slides open the emergency compartment and flicks on the two oxygen recirculators. Unfortunate fact about that technology: it works better and longer the more oxygen is already in the air. Something that small won't give off a signature large enough for Imperials to spot.
He anchors them to the wall with two carabiners. There are a few chemical heat packs, but they shouldn't end up needing those so quickly. That's for exposure to the elements, on more hostile worlds. There are two blankets, though, and Cassian retrieves them.
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It's an empty bluff -- Poe's terrible at sabacc, terrible at anything, really, that requires deception. He's pretty sure Andor would wipe the floor with him, but it's a nice thought, anyway.
His attention finds Andor once more, as he maneuvers himself out of his seat, gently propelling himself across the cabin. It's a little interesting, how natural he looks like that, like he was born to it -- Poe's learned how to be functional in zero gee over the years, but never felt particularly confident about it. He finds himself wondering if it's something he learned before he joined up, but doubts he'll ever ask.
Mostly, it reassures Poe a little to think that Andor's done this before, and he turns his attention back out the viewport while his companion works in relative silence. That's the part he's not terribly fond of, really -- quiet is one thing, but silence? Usually, it marks the passing of something terrible.
He glances back, catching a glimpse of the blankets in Andor's arms as he returns toward the small pilot's cabin, and makes a face. "Wish I'd have known we were gonna be taking an unscheduled rest stop," Poe calls over the back of his chair. "Would've dressed for it."
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"I didn't know," he says. It's an apology. "I didn't expect they would have a Star Destroyer so close." And, in fact, that speaks to the possibility that Cassian just took out someone more important than even the Resistance had realized. "I would have warned you."
Operational security be damned.
He slides into his own chair, getting the blanket under control and wrapped around him under the harness.
"You were insulted, weren't you?" asks Cassian, looking over to Poe. "That she didn't just use you for this assignment."
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Poe waves off the apology with a faint shake of his head quickly, though. "You're off the hook for that one; ain't like you're some future-sensing Jedi, right? Unless you are." He laughs, then carefully extracts an arm from beneath the blanket to scratch the underside of his jaw. "Been on enough of these joyrides to know you never know what's gonna happen. At least I'm not the poor sucker diving out of a headhunter at a moving ship, this time around."
He's babbling a little, and recognizes it a little later, recognizes that's his brain doing its best to casually ignore the implications of First Order assets that are once again delivering aid to New Republic personnel who call. Any sense of good humor fades as Poe stares out at the jagged edge of the overhang, the debris-strewn expanse of space beyond. "Would've wanted to fly something with some punch, if we did know. Suppose we'll be seeing more of that, now they've made their move."
More of the New Republic's people, turned or turning. People who apparently haven't learned a damn thing from the last war. It's enough to make his skin crawl -- or maybe that's just the recognition that they're all but unprotected, like this.
Cassian's question has him glancing over sharply, surprised all over again. "She's been doing this longer than we've been alive, Captain." A pause, and then Poe sighs heavily. "If the General thinks I'm not the one, then I'm not the one."
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Cassian came from somewhere warm, but it's been a long time since then. He's adapted.
He lets Poe keep speaking, as he settles himself in. The pilot's anxious about sitting still; that much is clear. Running and hiding, though, is where Cassian lives. His entire life is carrying out tasks that couldn't possibly be done with a fair fight, if the whole might of the First Order was turned against him. Poe is used to being the underdog, but an underdog that slugs it out all the same.
Though Cassian is curious, now, about diving out of a headhunter at a moving ship.
"She uses you for... finding. Flying. Those specific missions where failure might mean that the galaxy has no one left to fight." Cassian glances sideways, to Poe. "Most of the missions I have are boring, or pointless. Or without a specific goal, just to find anything important, to develop networks of contacts. It needs subtlety. Someone who won't be noticed." He looks forward, again. "Or someone who'll pull the trigger when it's not a fair fight." Like this one.
Cassian might not particularly like that about himself. There was a time, years and year ago, when putting his hands on a gun and looking through a scope, intending to pull the trigger, left him shaking and sweating, heart pounding so hard he could feel it in the back of his throat. He was just a kid, and he still cared about things like that. None of that is true anymore.
Now, he just pulls the trigger.
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He wonders why Cassian Andor is telling him these things. He's never questioned the Intelligence arm of the Resistance -- at least not their usefulness, or their ability to get things done. He's certainly not questioning Andor's presence on this mission, much less expecting justifications. And yet, he thinks of the General, of the things she'd said to him the first time they'd met. She'd said he'd been looking for adventure, for the chance to do good in pursuit of that ... he wonders if Andor sees those same things, or if he's summarizing Poe's own dossier as explanation.
"Not just an adventure-seeking flyboy, y'know," Poe says, but there's no hint of offense taken in the way he says it. If anything, he's just -- curious. About this. About Andor. "I can do subtle." He laughs quietly after that, wondering at what point he started feeling the need to justify himself. At least he knows better than to try to argue unnoticed. The way his own missions tend to skew ... well. Poe has his own extensive network, but sometimes the downside of that is that it's hard to run into someone familiar, for better or worse.
The humor fades quickly, though. Poe pulls away from his study of Andor to stare out the viewport again, silent for several seconds. He opens his mouth to speak, then thinks better of it. Tries again, a moment later. "I vaped a planet, Captain. I think -- I think it's fair to say we've all moved a little past fair fights."
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That, there, is why he is the one for this kind of mission and Poe isn't. Cassian doesn't trust, but he doesn't rest, either. He never stops fighting. His flame has gone from embers to bonfires and back again, but it's never gone out. He's exactly the person you need if you want someone dead at any cost -- at all cost.
Vaped a planet. It actually takes Cassian a second to understand. He never thought of Starkiller as a planet. Just as another creation, another weapon, like the Death Star.
He lets his eyes shift back to Poe, and he gives a slight, fractional nod. Fair point. Still: those were soldiers. They were asking for it. Not civilians (who may, to be fair, also have been asking for it).
"Not adventure," says Cassian. "That's not what I meant. If you wanted adventure, there are other ways. If you wanted to put yourself in between the First Order and the people out here, this is it." But Poe still chose this. He chose it because he knew the fight with the First Order could get into the Core, because he knew that this was everyone's fight long before the Republic was willing to admit it. He still could have stayed away. Cassian couldn't. This fight has infected him. He breathes it; it's in his blood; it's a shadow in his eyes.
"But you're right," he murmurs. "We're a long way from a fair fight."
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Poe does not blame those beneath the armor, even as he kills them. No, Poe saves his fury for the people who did this to them. People that know better.
"My parents were both rebels," Poe says, and that smile inches back, little by little. "They didn't join up just to keep me safe. Like hell I could just sit back and let this thing they helped build crumble. Helping people, absolutely, but -- this is for them, and the others, too." Proof that all those sacrifices decades ago weren't wasted.
Poe settles back in his seat, adjusts the blanket to curl his hands into the coarse fabric. Already, he feels the chill creeping into his fingertips; the next few hours promise to be an exercise in discomfort. To pull his attention away from the fact, he glances back over at Andor, chewing on his question before he decides whether or not to bother asking.
Curiosity wins out, as it usually does. "How bad were they?"
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Damn.
"That world has a fault line," says Cassian, "between two continents, drifting apart. It makes a trench, all the way down to the mantle. It is a natural source of geothermal energy. And the full length of it is nothing but factories." He assumes that Poe doesn't know the details of this. Why would he? "Torpedoes. Power sources. Forging metal parts that need the kind of heat most planets can't provide."
He shifts. His eyes stay focused forward. "This planet suffered when the Empire died. Factories closed. Jobs ended. But, recently, there's been a change. Nothing official reported to the Republic, but factories are lighting up where they've been dark for decades. And there are signs. Imports have gone up, and the planetary government has started to build again. But they haven't taken any money from the Republic.
"I've been here for months, to find out what happened. No one is talking about it. No holonews. Nothing. And I found out why."
A little huff. He looks down. "They were making -- everything. Weapons, hyperdrives, power cores. And it's going outward, to the First Order. All of it."
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He shivers. How many more are there, not yet discovered?
"From there, it all sounds so reasonable, doesn't it?" Poe glances over at Andor, breathes a slow sigh of disappointment. "We can bring you back what you thought you had. Just smile and close your eyes while we wipe out a star system or two, go back to crushing nonhumans beneath our heels. Seems like too many people who should know better have just ... forgotten."
Every argument comes back to that too-often hidden cost. Poe has seen just how seductive ignorance can be, but he doesn't understand how the tragedies of the Empire can be shrugged off, even as the groundwork for a repeat performance is laid bare. "And the people profiting off of it?" But Poe wonders if he doesn't already know. This world is likely already lost, as a new senate -- a vulnerable senate, with the fleet gone -- scrambles to fill the void. This ... probably wasn't about changing minds and restoring the Republic's authority, but rather sowing chaos and doubt among those who would take over.
No, Poe thinks. As usual, General Organa is right. These aren't the sorts of missions he was made for at all.
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"But now they know," he says, to Poe. "They know the governor is dead, and a First Order ship is in orbit. There is evidence that a Vader Lives group was responsible. This is too big for a coverup."
Now, this planet will know what was happening. And maybe they'll come out in favor of the First Order at first, maybe not. It doesn't matter, because Republic connections will dry up, Republic planets will stop trading, and there will be negative economic consequences. And no one to blame but the First Order. Which will have, in the meantime, been preoccupied hunting down the Vader Lives groups on the planet, of which there are many, given the connections this planet had to the Empire.
In fact, there was a fair amount of speculation on whether those groups would try to claim credit for the assassination anyway. Cassian thinks they will. A few other Intelligence people came down on the other side. There's a betting pool.
Sowing chaos and doubt... yes.
But also giving nearby planets a chance to understand what happened here and defend themselves from the more subtle kinds of First Order intrusion.
He watches Poe's reaction. "See?" he asks. "You have to be a special kind of bastard to try this." Like Cassian is.
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Truly, they've moved well beyond fair fights. A few years ago, General Organa had been horrified at the suggestion of kidnapping a senator. Now, the Resistance assassinates governors.
"That's one way to think of it, I suppose," Poe says, and fixes Andor with a sharper look. "Is that how you see yourself?"
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"It was my idea," he says, bluntly, suddenly humorless. "What else would you call me?" The question is some combination of rhetorical and serious; he doesn't believe there's any real answer that Poe can offer, but he would listen if Poe did offer one.
His idea, his mission. His careful study of the planet's political situation, though he was backed up by other operatives, analysts. If this goes sideways, it's his fault.
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