IC:
“The importance of Ossus would be itself as a symbol,” Julius answered simply. “It was the first planet chosen in the rule of the Rogue Jedi Order, and therefore shall be the first to fall to order. Rogues have no order in their lives, so we shall provide them with it, and we shall have the galaxy.” Julius smiled at the thought, but was quick to bring up the basics of the conversation. “But of course that’s just speculation on my part. Whatever High Command has planned, they haven’t told me yet...”
Julius leaned back in his seat, swirling the drink in his hand as he waited for Ciscero to talk. The man had no intention of actually drinking his whisky - probably one of the biggest mistakes he could have made was to do that.
“So what’s the word?” Ciscero asked, after Julius had maintained silence for a moment longer. The other turned his head up to face his partner, then looked down at the datapad Ciscero had casually dropped on the table.
“Nothing much.” Julius stated, looking around and scanning the bar with a quick glance. “You know Mary, right?” He continued when Ciscero confirmed with a simple nod of his head. “Well... her baby’s been born.”
“Really?!” The surprise and happiness in Ciscero’s voice was in no way manufactured, as anyone would expect of a highly trained Imperial agent. After the initial shock of the words hit him, he asked: “What’s she naming him?”
Julius let another smile part his face, as he and Ciscero locked eyes.
“Dylan.”
Ciscero relaxed a bit, sitting back. His arms flopped to his sides, and he closed his eyes. “Good name.”
“Yes, it is, isn’t it...” Julius trailed off as he unseated himself, stretching his legs and rising to his full height. He didn’t make a show of it, and then just as discretely slipped the datapad Ciscero had brought along into one of the pockets in his coat.
As he left the bar, his slackened pace quickened. Ciscero could be trusted to fake getting drunk, and then hole away somewhere until dawn. The night’s work would be left up to Julius, but the Intel agent didn’t necessarily mind much.
He was quickly moving through the suburbs now, and soon looming before Julius was the mass of a giant transmitter. It was new, much the same as everything else in this district. Everything on this world was either very new, or extraordinarily old.
This transmitter was indeed new, and therefore had a state-of-the-art security system.
Nothing Imperial Intelligence couldn’t get around easily enough, though, and nothing Julius hadn’t handled countless times before.
This time would be no different, and judging by the state of the transmitter, the New Order fleet waiting on the edge of the system should receive this final go-ahead fairly quickly.