Lark nods because that's more or less his take on it, too. What really has his attention is the file itself. How thorough it is.
This is not something a travel agent mother of two would have a knack for. But then, someone as clean as Elizabeth seems wouldn't be here anyway, he's always known that.
"He doesn't have much influence with the other wardens, though."
She knows that, and it's a bit of her own self that she's letting show-- just like fighting Alfie in the ring, just like the post she'd made with Nina. These aren't things a travel agent and mother of two should be doing, but then again that doesn't define anyone.
"He doesn't. But there's very few wardens that really know how to influence the rest of them. They're all insular."
"Having even one on our side would be good. But I believe there are more who can be flipped." Ricki's term, which Lark has borrowed shamelessly. "How many do you know well?"
"He sees graduation differently than anyone else I've talked to." Lark agrees. He likes Ricki rather a lot but that means he also doesn't trust Ricki outside of specific, agreed-upon boundaries.
"He also doesn't belong with that group as much," she adds, curling a
strand of hair around her finger. She doesn't trust Ricki either, their
politics differing so drastically and all, but she likes parts of
him. He's clever and sharp and unapologetic, which is a quality she can
respect even in an enemy.
"When I had problems with my last warden, he helped. He reacted in a way
that I didn't expect any warden to."
"Really? What did Ricki do?" Elizabeth seems expert at getting along. If she had a problem with a warden, Lark is eager to have some clue as to what it was.
"He made me feel like my anger was justified, like I could actually be as angry as I was. They all talk about these rules, and how hard it is for them, that they don't get a guide book--"
She scoffs and shakes her head.
"It's no excuse for what Beyond did. And Ricki actually gave me a way to not stand idly by."
"The 'rules' they complain about would mean more to me if they actually existed, but they don't. The wardens create them. They base them on their experiences from home and then act like they're bound by them." It's funny to Lark.
"Beyond?" That's a name he hasn't thought about in a while. "I'm not even sure I want to know, but what did he do?"
She looks at him for a second-- he's very, very good at acting casual when he really wants to know something, she thinks. That's alright. So is she, and in this case she doesn't care about letting him know.
"He broke into my cabin to read my file, after he'd given it to me and told me he didn't need to read it in order to be a good warden to me. He told me to trust him to respect my boundaries, and then crossed them in the worst possible way."
"It's nice to know he didn't really change at all from inmate to graduate. He'd let people beat him half to death before, and then he abused his power. Nice." He hates that it happened. He's also glad that it did. One more piece of evidence for him and the other inmates to hold onto.
"And he still got your file," Lark guesses, "But if he did at least he's gone now. Whatever is in yours--has it given you any idea how you're expected to get out of here?"
"I made sure he left it in my cabin after he'd read all of it," she shakes her head.
"I know what the Admiral wants me to do. But I won't do it." She believes he wants her to become a capitalist, an American-- wants her to stop spying, to stop taking lives for her country, for the cause. And she won't stop her life's work, even after a near-death.
"Good." Maybe it's not good, but Lark isn't in a mood to give the Admiral anything.
Anyway that had just been a tangent. "I think we should pick a warden to do a file on. Preferably someone who isn't paired, or hasn't been paired more than a month."
No particular name comes to mind for Lark, but he's headed the same direction she is. "New wardens are usually more open than those who've been here long enough to be screwed over. So someone who got here within the last two months? How does that timeframe sound?"
"She's a possibility. But with the movies being such a presence it's going to be harder for me to sort out bias. There's also Trisana, but she's anxious enough it would take finesse to get anything substantial from her. My warden now is Pietro Maximoff. I knew him when he was an inmate, but they all change a little when they graduate."
Lark nods, jots a mental note. "He's on the priority list, then. We should also find someone we've had little or no interaction with, too--that way the inmate we give the file to can't claim we're on a witch hunt."
"I haven't talked to Trisana at all. And-- Bastila Shan, though I think
she's also from those movies." She had a husband to take her son out for
that stuff, okay, she doesn't know.
"Is she? I only saw the first two." So if Bastila was, she was background. "I don't know enough about her to be worried over assumptions. Let's put her down."
no subject
This is not something a travel agent mother of two would have a knack for. But then, someone as clean as Elizabeth seems wouldn't be here anyway, he's always known that.
"He doesn't have much influence with the other wardens, though."
no subject
"He doesn't. But there's very few wardens that really know how to influence the rest of them. They're all insular."
no subject
no subject
"'Well'? I don't know. Not a lot. Ricki Tarr-- he's changed less by graduation than I think other wardens believe."
no subject
no subject
"He also doesn't belong with that group as much," she adds, curling a strand of hair around her finger. She doesn't trust Ricki either, their politics differing so drastically and all, but she likes parts of him. He's clever and sharp and unapologetic, which is a quality she can respect even in an enemy.
"When I had problems with my last warden, he helped. He reacted in a way that I didn't expect any warden to."
no subject
no subject
She scoffs and shakes her head.
"It's no excuse for what Beyond did. And Ricki actually gave me a way to not stand idly by."
no subject
"Beyond?" That's a name he hasn't thought about in a while. "I'm not even sure I want to know, but what did he do?"
no subject
"He broke into my cabin to read my file, after he'd given it to me and told me he didn't need to read it in order to be a good warden to me. He told me to trust him to respect my boundaries, and then crossed them in the worst possible way."
And she nearly shot him over it.
no subject
"What did you end up doing?"
no subject
"I almost shot him on the spot," she admits, breezily. "But before I could do anything else I went into a coma, and he left."
no subject
no subject
"I know what the Admiral wants me to do. But I won't do it." She believes he wants her to become a capitalist, an American-- wants her to stop spying, to stop taking lives for her country, for the cause. And she won't stop her life's work, even after a near-death.
no subject
Anyway that had just been a tangent. "I think we should pick a warden to do a file on. Preferably someone who isn't paired, or hasn't been paired more than a month."
no subject
Poe Dameron comes to mind.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
"There's a woman here from those movies-- Princess Leia."
no subject
no subject
She shrugs fluidly. "We can find out about that. He talked on the network often enough to make a good file, compare the differences."
no subject
no subject
"I haven't talked to Trisana at all. And-- Bastila Shan, though I think she's also from those movies." She had a husband to take her son out for that stuff, okay, she doesn't know.
no subject
(no subject)