Ana Rix
Character
Ana stared at him for a moment, trying to determine whether he was warning her or advertising. The answer, she suspected, was both. Her gaze drifted back toward the ballroom where dozens of conversations continued beneath crystal chandeliers and carefully curated appearances; compared to what he was describing, the political maneuvering suddenly seemed almost straightforward.
"I spend enough time around smugglers that people attempting to convince me questionable decisions are perfectly reasonable is not entirely new territory," she said dryly, a faint smile twitching at the corner of her mouth. "Though I admit having them lead with the proposal instead of disguising it behind three months of social maneuvering would probably be a novel experience. Actually, no—the truly novel experience would be people being honest enough for me to know which conversation I was having." There was something oddly appealing about that. Chaotic and exhausting, certainly, but at least it sounded genuine.
Her eyes settled back on him, the datapad resting forgotten against her side as she studied his expression. "You say that like it's a challenge, but after spending an evening surrounded by people who answer simple questions with strategic ambiguity, I can see the appeal. Besides, if someone tells me what they want openly, I can make an informed decision. It's the people who pretend they want one thing while pursuing another that concern me. Which, now that I think about it, may explain why you're more relaxed talking about Zeltros than you are talking about politicians."
Jack Sheltrak
"I spend enough time around smugglers that people attempting to convince me questionable decisions are perfectly reasonable is not entirely new territory," she said dryly, a faint smile twitching at the corner of her mouth. "Though I admit having them lead with the proposal instead of disguising it behind three months of social maneuvering would probably be a novel experience. Actually, no—the truly novel experience would be people being honest enough for me to know which conversation I was having." There was something oddly appealing about that. Chaotic and exhausting, certainly, but at least it sounded genuine.
Her eyes settled back on him, the datapad resting forgotten against her side as she studied his expression. "You say that like it's a challenge, but after spending an evening surrounded by people who answer simple questions with strategic ambiguity, I can see the appeal. Besides, if someone tells me what they want openly, I can make an informed decision. It's the people who pretend they want one thing while pursuing another that concern me. Which, now that I think about it, may explain why you're more relaxed talking about Zeltros than you are talking about politicians."