[He could point out that, for a different sort of general, that
wouldn't be a mystery at all. Easy prey. Wouldn't strike quite the right
note. Instead he pinches the bridge of his nose, thinking through the
little he knows about this flood.]
How much did you arrive knowing about the place? Just, uh, so I don't bore
you with repeat details.
[Sloane seems very much aware of this herself. But she knows Armitage; knows he wouldn't take advantage where others would have, for as much for his sake as theirs. She shrugs, once]
Most details are relevant when coming from new sources of information. I'm here; Hux is not, and I am his replacement. He is grateful to me for whatever stupid, sentimental reason he has, and while I respect his privacy in that, I do not when it comes to his safety.
Physically? Um, I don't contribute much in an altercation. He's a lot more use than I am. In, well, less... less tangible ways, he seems to like having me around, that's all.
[Being called on to justify his place in Hux's life is uncomfortable. He can't really do it to himself sometimes, after all.]
I... I can promise I'd never do anything to hurt him. And the way this place works, I'm not really a liability, either.
[He should probably know about her. The little he does know of Hux's past... well, he doesn't like to talk about it. Neither of them likes to talk about it. They've never needed a past. But he should still know, somehow. Another little guilt for the towering heap of them.
And that makes this... about as close as he's likely to get to meeting any sort of family. Huh. That's an interesting new sense of pressure.]
Quite a bit, actually, not that that's much of an accomplishment. He, um, he never mentioned you, but I'm sure that wasn't--I mean, we don't discuss much about... We mostly talk about books, honestly, engineering projects, that kind of thing.
[Sloane at last puts her gun back in its holster, crossing her arms to give him a proper once-over]
I didn't come here by choice, and I certainly have no interest in interfering with or commenting on Hux's projects. I'm not an engineer.
I'm more interested to learn the status of the Empire or lack thereof in the future. And I will answer some of your questions in exchange, if you like.
[Alright, a misstep. But he takes a lot of those.]
I'll tell you what I know, but that's only what I've learned here. I've, um, been dead since before you last saw Hux, back home. Time doesn't work right here. Um, obviously.
[Well, she knew she'd last seen Hux when he was a child, and... nevermind. Bodhi is rarely willing to explain his mistakes. Feels too much like defending them.]
Oh. Well. People from our... same, um, general... galaxy are pretty heavily represented here, I think? But scattered across decades.
[He thinks. He knows full well he hasn't spoken to half of them. He might be missing someone who's come from generations before or after.]
One of each. The simmering pool of Dark Side energy under the desk is mine.
[The one person Dio doesn't want to destroy is the one who led with a blaster under his owner's chin. Seems about right.]
Which means the princess is probably in the bedroom.
[And as that's where his boots are, a bit of cat chaos seems likely. He rises from the desk chair slowly, hands empty and visible, without really thinking about it. Seeming like a non threat is his best defense.]
[He absently bends to pet the cat as she slips out to pester Dio and investigate, painfully conscious that the door he's just opened is to a bedroom that clearly belongs to them both. Not that this fact could be a shock, but there was plausible deniability if she wanted to take it. Bodhi hastily shoves his toes into his boots and grabs a sweatshirt from the closet.]
It's, um, not far to the canteen, and we're overlapping normal breakfast hours. I think.
[She eyes the room, and then Bodhi, mind working furiously. Sloane reaches out her hand and stops him from walking, giving him an intense stare that demands honesty]
Is he taking advantage of you, Ensign?
[Did he fall the same way as his father? Sloane wants to know]
[Bodhi's wince is almost imperceptible. Still doesn't like an unexpected touch.
He considers a few answers. The hierarchy that would have made that possible is something they've left behind. That no advantage is being taken anyway, but he's certainly not going to explain that. But he just shakes his head.]
He would never. We... we've known each other for years now. It just... happened this way.
[It's Bodhi's general shyness working against him now, as well as the awkwardness of the question. He's so bad at eye contact. Apparently the moreso when he's defending his relationship with Hux.]
He would never. We, um... we're leaving together.
[He's looking for something concrete and straightforward that might convince her. Certainly he wouldn't choose to go with someone who was hurting him? ...No, he's known plenty of people who'd do that, choose the known danger over the unknown. Damn. But he's committed now.]
[He breathes a tiny sigh of relief. His only other recourse was to start babbling about nice things Hux has done for him, and then they'd probably both feel as awkward as he does now.]
We're not.
[He considers and decides against telling her right now that Hux used to be. Maybe later. He's already messed up several times.]
But there are rewards for, um, participating. We're both here until we can, well, help a prisoner... be released.
[She probably means his reward, because what does information about his... prisoner do her? (He probably shouldn't use the word, but it's, well, accurate. This could get a lot worse than awkward. Might as well get it over with.]
I'm still really unclear on what you know and don't, sorry. How surprising is the news that I'm a defector with a price on my head and Hux has sort of turned rebel?
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[He could point out that, for a different sort of general, that wouldn't be a mystery at all. Easy prey. Wouldn't strike quite the right note. Instead he pinches the bridge of his nose, thinking through the little he knows about this flood.]
How much did you arrive knowing about the place? Just, uh, so I don't bore you with repeat details.
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Most details are relevant when coming from new sources of information. I'm here; Hux is not, and I am his replacement. He is grateful to me for whatever stupid, sentimental reason he has, and while I respect his privacy in that, I do not when it comes to his safety.
[Her eyes search Bodhi's, penetrating]
So, Ensign. Is he safe with you?
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Physically? Um, I don't contribute much in an altercation. He's a lot more use than I am. In, well, less... less tangible ways, he seems to like having me around, that's all.
[Being called on to justify his place in Hux's life is uncomfortable. He can't really do it to himself sometimes, after all.]
I... I can promise I'd never do anything to hurt him. And the way this place works, I'm not really a liability, either.
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He was still small when I left him. Hope he's a bit taller than you, anyway.
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And that makes this... about as close as he's likely to get to meeting any sort of family. Huh. That's an interesting new sense of pressure.]
Quite a bit, actually, not that that's much of an accomplishment. He, um, he never mentioned you, but I'm sure that wasn't--I mean, we don't discuss much about... We mostly talk about books, honestly, engineering projects, that kind of thing.
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[she seems to eye him further, this mousey little ensign who all signs have pointed Hux actually caring for him.]
All right. Ensign....What is your last name?
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[Which probably sounds like he's trying to deflect attention from himself. He's nervous and babbling, is what he is.]
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[Sloane at last puts her gun back in its holster, crossing her arms to give him a proper once-over]
I didn't come here by choice, and I certainly have no interest in interfering with or commenting on Hux's projects. I'm not an engineer.
I'm more interested to learn the status of the Empire or lack thereof in the future. And I will answer some of your questions in exchange, if you like.
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I'll tell you what I know, but that's only what I've learned here. I've, um, been dead since before you last saw Hux, back home. Time doesn't work right here. Um, obviously.
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I was going to comment on your wardrobe being woefully out-of-date but admittedly time travel didn't cross my mind.
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Oh. Well. People from our... same, um, general... galaxy are pretty heavily represented here, I think? But scattered across decades.
[He thinks. He knows full well he hasn't spoken to half of them. He might be missing someone who's come from generations before or after.]
Bit disorienting.
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[she says, with the barest HINT of a smile]
Where is the canteen on this woeful little ship?
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[Logistics are his comfortable refuge when he's busy humiliating himself.]
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[Sloane doesn't like Bodhi, but she prefers his company to walking an unknown ship alone.]
Your cats, or his?
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[The one person Dio doesn't want to destroy is the one who led with a blaster under his owner's chin. Seems about right.]
Which means the princess is probably in the bedroom.
[And as that's where his boots are, a bit of cat chaos seems likely. He rises from the desk chair slowly, hands empty and visible, without really thinking about it. Seeming like a non threat is his best defense.]
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I shouldn't be surprised at this show of sentimentality over resources, but you reportedly have an abundance of both here.
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[He absently bends to pet the cat as she slips out to pester Dio and investigate, painfully conscious that the door he's just opened is to a bedroom that clearly belongs to them both. Not that this fact could be a shock, but there was plausible deniability if she wanted to take it. Bodhi hastily shoves his toes into his boots and grabs a sweatshirt from the closet.]
It's, um, not far to the canteen, and we're overlapping normal breakfast hours. I think.
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Is he taking advantage of you, Ensign?
[Did he fall the same way as his father? Sloane wants to know]
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He considers a few answers. The hierarchy that would have made that possible is something they've left behind. That no advantage is being taken anyway, but he's certainly not going to explain that. But he just shakes his head.]
He would never. We... we've known each other for years now. It just... happened this way.
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Tell me truthfully. Has he harmed you?
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He would never. We, um... we're leaving together.
[He's looking for something concrete and straightforward that might convince her. Certainly he wouldn't choose to go with someone who was hurting him? ...No, he's known plenty of people who'd do that, choose the known danger over the unknown. Damn. But he's committed now.]
When we both can leave, I mean.
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I didn't think either of you were prisoners here.
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We're not.
[He considers and decides against telling her right now that Hux used to be. Maybe later. He's already messed up several times.]
But there are rewards for, um, participating. We're both here until we can, well, help a prisoner... be released.
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Yes. I've heard.
Yours is?
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I'm still really unclear on what you know and don't, sorry. How surprising is the news that I'm a defector with a price on my head and Hux has sort of turned rebel?
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