By the time Saturn was able to visit Cyrus the following morning, Charon had already sent his message. It was the first time he had used the screen, broadcasting from Stark Mountain to tell Cyrus that this is how one runs a world.
Cyrus was mum on the details other than that, though Saturn could see he was still enraged from it, fists and jaw clenching every time he mentioned the abhorrent scientist.
"He plans to sell Heatran," Saturn said.
Cyrus sneered, just for a flash before his typical neutral expression took over again. "He will not succeed. He cannot control that sort of power."
Saturn nodded. "He's a reckless fool. But he doesn't care about the collateral damage. Not that...we ever did..."
"It is entirely different. We planned from the beginning to wipe the slate clean, to purge the world of its ills and rebuild it anew."
"Or...you did," Saturn reminded him.
Cyrus seemed almost taken aback by that. "...I did, yes." He sighed heavily and chuckled to himself. "I'll have many more hours to myself for that sort of pondering. Even when we put a stop to this...I think I'll need time to myself. I'm determined to see this through to the end, no matter what that means for any of us. For myself, you, him..."
Saturn wasn't sure he understood. "Understood, sir."
"Of all the days for you to leave the door unlocked..." Cyrus began before Saturn could say anything.
The door seemed unusually easy to open that day but he hadn't considered that it wasn't locked. Saturn relied on it to lock automatically whenever he closed it. "What do y--Sir, I bring important news."
"I'm assuming, from the fact that we at no point today were shaken by a massive eruption, that Charon failed in his plan."
That was exactly what Saturn had planned to say. "Exactly, sir. You're so astute." The compliment had come on impulse, trying to smooth their relationship a little bit with unknown effects.
"You may wish to hold that statement until I tell you what happened."
"Oh?"
Cyrus took in a breath and seemed to be holding back some trace of a smile. "It was the strangest thing. The strangest man...A man came in here, not a Galactic. I assume he must be the Kaisei you spoke of." He tilted his head back as if reminiscing. "He offered to untie me, and when I declined, he listened. Although the oddest thing about him..." Finally he smiled fully, a gentle and calm expression, so far removed from his usual intensity. "He reminded me so much of Hareta. Perhaps I've been in here too long, thinking about that boy too much, but it was the predominant thought I had about him. What do you think?"
Saturn allowed himself a bit of a smile as well. "I'll be damned. That was probably Kaisei. He's the only non-Galactic in the building. Weird rugged guy, vest, looks like he came out of a cheesy adventure movie?"
"Yes, and he had a Plusle with him. It jumped on my head."
"Yeah, that'd be Kaisei." Saturn had thought Cyrus's hair was a little out of sorts but attributed it to being in captivity. "He reminded you of Hareta, you say? That makes sense. I've read his intel and we believe he's Hareta's father."
Cyrus's eyes widened for a moment, his mouth opening just a little farther in a subtle expression of surprise, something still so understated, before he looked off to the side. "Heh. of course. It's only to be expected, isn't it?"
Saturn wasn't certain what that meant. "Kaisei is said to know the location of Giratina, but so far he isn't talking. He claims he doesn't remember, so Charon is trying to play a longer game with him. Feeding him and such."
"The excessively large sandwich."
"Haha yes, and a lot of very large orders from local restaurants. Though I think his patience is running thin. He's uh..." Saturn used his stagger between words as an excuse to retrieve the water bottle and uncap it. "Today he apparently had a run-in with an officer of the International Police and took to researching that officer, and already he's going to zero in on a weakness. I'm not sure what it was, but he had already found it by the time he returned to base. He didn't tell me much."
"You didn't meet with him?"
"Not today. I met him at the helicopter pad and that was all he said. I don't know any details."
Cyrus exhaled heavily. "I assume that means his plan to use Mars failed."
"She wasn't with him, and..." Saturn stood a little straighter. "I get the feeling that if she had died or been captured, he would have gloated to me about punishment or whatever. He sees her as the weakest of us and seems to hate her for it." Saturn shifted a bit. "Or maybe he just hates her loyalty to you. Either way, it's something worrisome. But because he didn't mention it, I assume she got away."
"I see." Cyrus let his eyes fall close and his head droop forward, the thoughts seeming to weigh on him heavier than usual. "Mars is...powerfully loyal, of course. I was thinking earlier of her reaction on the Spear Pillar when she learned of my true intention. I had spoken openly of my intention to create a new world."
"Yes, sir." They had talked about it before, or it seemed like they must have, but it was easier to let Cyrus continue than to ponder if it was a repeated subject or not.
"Truth by omission, or a lie by omission. Whichever, I did intend for even my closest followers to not know. Even your loyalty would have been tested if you had learned that early on."
"Mitsumi seemed to know."
Cyrus leaned back and sighed, eyes still closed to the world. "I raised her, after all. I raised her to carry my beliefs and intentions. She was meant to be my successor, to be the one who would ascend to godhood, until I realized that I could accomplish that goal not only within my lifetime, but within just a few years." Finally his eyes opened, a bit red around the edges from being held shut so intently. "I wonder sometimes...if she had still held her own loyalty, how she would have reacted to the downfall of our organization."
Saturn couldn't really answer that for certain. "Maybe she would have taken up leadership in your stead. Or just trounced Charon and called it a day."
Cyrus smiled a little bit at the idea, just a little, but enough for Saturn to take notice. "I'll perhaps have to ask her when this is over." He shook his head. "Or is that uncharacteristically optimistic of me?"
"Maybe a little, but it's good to have hope for the future." Saturn shrugged. "You wouldn't be so dedicated to changing things if you didn't believe they could be changed to begin with. In a way, even in your intense pessimism, there was still optimism. Otherwise you would have just given up and never tried."
The former leader pondered that for a moment, taking the opportunity to drink some of the offered water. After gulping more down, he sighed. "That's a good point, though I'm not sure optimism is really the correct term for what fueled me. That makes it seem far...cheerier than it truly was. Is. I don't know."
The uncertainty was uneasy for Saturn. They had just discussed this. "You said that you're not worthy of being a god."
"You said that, but I did agree. I'm not. That doesn't mean that I don't believe that the world must change, or that extreme measures shouldn't be taken to force that change. Only that I can't be the one to do it." Cyrus was looking away again, but he was still smiling. "I did things incorrectly. I was...wrong." There was enough of a catch in his voice for Saturn to take notice. "But that doesn't mean that nobody will ever be able to do it correctly. That nobody will be able to change the world simply because I couldn't."
Saturn pocketed the now empty water bottle. "I just need some reassurance that you won't do it again. And no matter what you tell me, some part of me will always doubt you." He took a step away, covering for it by retrieving the package of food. "I feel like even when you die, and don't take that the wrong way because even with everything you've done, I hope that isn't for a long time, I'll still..." He stopped for a moment, trailing off and letting his gaze fall on the faint Galactic logo stamped on the pouch. "I'll still have my doubts. I've built you up in my head as this mythic figure because that's what you always were to me. To all of us. I know you're just a man, just a human like anyone else. I know that from a practical standpoint." He twisted the pouch in his hand, pressing the logo against his palm. "But you always seemed larger than life. And I don't know that I'll ever be able to get rid of that image of you."
"So when I die, you believe on some level that I'll take on some sort of supernatural significance?"
The commander's laugh was some breathy, nasally sound, a sharp exhalation with a hesitant smile. "On some level, yeah. Like you'll be trying to fight the gods as a spirit or something."
"Perhaps. I wouldn't rule it out." Cyrus's voice was flat as usual, and Saturn supposed this must mean he was serious. "Although the notion of such things is, likely, something we will simply see when it happens."
"Yeah, likely..." Saturn wanted to brush the idea of Cyrus's mortality aside, as well as the question of how serious Cyrus was being about the subject. "How are you feeling right now, anyway? Arms ok?"
"I'm not at risk of a blood clot, if that's what you're asking." Cyrus rotated his shoulders in a wheel fashion. "You've left things slack enough that I'm able to stretch a little."
"That was the idea!" Saturn smiled. "Just being allowed to get untied twice a day though, that's still gotta be uncomfortable." With a sigh, his expression softened a little. "I'm doing everything I can to get you out of here."
"I understand. You're forced into playing Charon's game."
"And there's still the question of what to do with you once you're out."
The statement lay heavy in the air, but Cyrus simply nodded, responding quicker than Saturn would have expected. "I know. I suspect that will be between myself and the International Police."
The bluntness of it took Saturn by surprise. The very thought that Cyrus would ever go along with something like that... "I know you're not going to turn yourself in."
"I want to propose a deal. Something I believe they will accept."
It sounded like more manipulative nonsense, but Saturn prompted him to continue.
"As you know, we have gathered much information through the years. Things I believe they will find valuable. Through our research, we have uncovered even the secrets of the divine. And although I originally intended to destroy that research with the old universe, as it would no longer be needed, if this reality is to remain, then we must use that data to move forward."
Saturn thought back to the destruction of the old base, before they had left to Mount Coronet, to summon the god Dialga at the Spear Pillar. Of course, none of them had known Cyrus's plan at the time, but in retrospect it brought into question why the base had to be destroyed if he was planning to wipe out everything anyway. Not as though Cyrus was internally consistent, considering that he had delayed that grand plan by several hours to wait for Hareta. He wanted to ask about that, about why any of that was necessary, but held back and let Cyrus keep talking.
"I do not believe there is anybody among the International Police who would either misuse the data or fully understand it. So I don't believe that anybody there would attempt to become a god."
Well, that at least merited a retort. "But someone's going to see that data eventually. You wouldn't want it to be consigned to some filing cabinet somewhere."
"Of course. The scientific community, as well as historians, would find it fascinating."
"Which will lead to someone eventually using it, won't it?"
Cyrus tilted his head back. "Eventually. Someone better suited to the job than I would be. This world must change, as I've said. I still fervently believe that, as surely as I speak to you today. But that is neither here nor there. I do not believe they contain such a person in their employ."
Saturn paused for a moment. "Did you believe you did? Someone who would betray everyone else for their own purposes?"
"That is entirely different."
"Is it? Cyrus...I know you THINK it's different but it's still trusting that nobody is going to be a backstabber or have evil ambition."
Cyrus frowned. "To have evil ambition...that's how you see it. That's how most people see it, isn't it? So it would be simple to conflate my actions and motivations with..." But he didn't finish, letting the statement trail off. "...Maybe I have to see it that way if I'm to negotiate with them. Regardless, I would like to negotiate continued access to that information, and I have not yet finalized the notion of who to entrust it to. If Professor Rowan has been a positive influence on Mitsumi, then clearly he believes that people like us can change."
Saturn noted the specific word usage and baggage of implication, that it was based on an external view rather than an indication of true change within someone. He couldn't quite give up on that suspicion, that paranoia, no matter what it really meant because the risk was far too great. It had become quite literally a matter of life and death. But he let Cyrus continue.
"And if he believes that, and she's certainly given him no reason to doubt, then perhaps he would be amenable to continuing that study. He at least would not let the data go to waste. But the International Police must still be involved in striking a deal with him, simply from a practical standpoint." Cyrus nodded as if agreeing with his own point. "They would involve themselves no matter what, between our own actions and now Kaisei's presence here, whatever he did for them to pursue him. So they cannot be overlooked as a strong element, as per the future of events."
"And yet they didn't come for us. I was anticipating that they'd try to invade the headquarters immediately after the League bombing, but we haven't heard anything."
"I know, and I can't speak for their inaction there. But they're no doubt going to. Something like that requires paperwork and planning, and they won't take any chances."
"You know, Charon said something similar," Saturn said with a faint smile, "but he didn't conclude the thought like you did. He seemed to dismiss the notion of any sort of backlash."
"He doesn't consider the consequences. I did, and even then I couldn't account for everything." Cyrus stretched his legs as best he could, sighing loudly as he did. "Mm. A bit of an overstated reaction there...No matter. Charon will be his own undoing."
"We can only hope, sir." It took Saturn a moment to realize he had addressed Cyrus in such a way.
"No, we must be more proactive than that. Since he is tracking down the other commanders, he will no doubt pursue Mitsumi in time."
The notion of the bent old man trying to contend with Mitsumi's overwhelming power initially made Saturn snort, but no, Charon was far more dangerous. He had already almost killed the ex-commander at the League. There was no way Charon could contend with her power directly, but that wasn't how he fought. And doing so would put Professor Rowan at risk as well, and perhaps all of his lab and research. "Do you think we should find her first? I was thinking he could try to target the Sandgem lab."
With a slow exhale, Cyrus thought further. "Is he actively searching for Jupiter and Mars? Or does he simply happen to come across them?"
"I think the first time it was a coincidence, but then he started actively searching for them. I don't remember."
"I see. You will have to keep on top of everything you can, you understand."
Saturn nodded. "Absolutely. I apologize."
"Regardless...Yes, find her. Alert her to what's been happening." Cyrus tilted his head back in thought. "Understand that this is not a decision I make lightly."
"Yeah," Saturn agreed, "just a few days ago you were saying not to involve her at all."
"She will take it as a reason to flee, to protect herself. She will not seek me out."
The potentials of the situation fell into place a little at that. "She'll tell Hareta."
"Yes. Also, Saturn..." The man's sudden eye contact startled Saturn. Cyrus's eyes had always been so burningly intense... "Do not betray your loyalty. Charon has ears everywhere, and we cannot assume anywhere is safe."
"I understand. So I keep being a lackey for him? What should I say?"
"Perhaps not anything so overt or direct, but something to get the point across. If Kaisei is really Hareta's father, perhaps establish that he is here as well."
Saturn considered this for a second. "It'll have to be done really carefully. You should probably come up with what I need to say."
Cyrus looked off to the side, expression soft but still strangely intense. "My words would seem artificial coming from you. It would be found out immediately. It's best that you speak your own mind. Regardless, first, focus on finding her."
"Gotcha," Saturn agreed with a nod.
"And there you see an example."
The commander paused. "Oh-oh, you wouldn't say 'gotcha'. And you didn't know what a party sub was." With a smile, he considered the notion of perhaps getting Cyrus to lighten up after this was over, taking him out for a sub sandwich. But it seemed shockingly familiar, something that would be far too close, breaking barriers between them that were best left standing.
The notion that they were still so distant, and always would be, wasn't inherently unsettling, but the reasons behind the differences between there, the barriers that could never be toppled, still brought a twist to Saturn's stomach.
"...sir, after everything is over, something I want you to do..." He trailed off.
"Saturn, I expect you to finish your sentences around me." Cyrus's tone was back to its usual dry intensity.
"Well..." He shifted slightly. It was a conversation he knew he had to have, but one that was always a notion of dread to think of. But better get it over with. "Cyrus, something you need to bear in mind is that even if we manage to get you out of here, and you make your deal with the International Police and stay out of prison..." He couldn't dare meet Cyrus's eyeline, so for all his firm posturing, he kept his eyes resolutely closed. "Sir, you need help. We need to ensure that you're not a danger to anybody, and if you're truly regretful in what you've done, you'll understand the importance of this."
Silence.
After a moment, Saturn chanced a glimpse of the man before him, but Cyrus hadn't moved at all. "Sir, do you under--"
"--Yes I understand." Cyrus's voice was firm, but free of the chill it had borne just a moment before. "And I agree."
It was easy enough to say, but Saturn didn't fully believe it, instead simply nodding in acknowledgement. To seek help would be vital, but that would be something they would manage later on. Hopefully with Mars and Jupiter there to route him as well.
And he knew that Cyrus would have picked up on those doubts, but the man said nothing in turn.
Saturn didn't care about asking for approval. He was supposed to still be in a position of authority in the team, after all, so any grunts were his to call out to a mission as he saw fit. If Charon had a problem with it, he could take it up with him later.
Though as he headed out to the plaza to meet with the grunts and depart, Saturn wondered if he would have been so casual about the whole thing just a few days ago.
Talking with Cyrus, having some sort of authority over *him*, was oddly empowering, even though he wondered how many of his words sunk in, or how many of Cyrus's words were genuine. But at the moment, he didn't care, and if that was reckless or careless of him was something he could deal with later.
His real mission wasn't to find Mitsumi, he reasoned. She was an intelligent person and would know the danger already. Any risks she would take from remaining in the area were risks she would anticipate. She would likely be with Rowan, the most logical target, serving as some sort of guard.
And Rowan, Saturn had found out, was currently at the Canalave Library. Which would put Mitsumi nearby, and almost certainly Hareta as well.
The thought of running into that little brat again, though... Saturn found that the very idea brought a clench to his fists. To have to rely on that disgusting twerp was nauseating.
He was, unfortunately, the strongest trainer any of them knew. Even more than Mitsumi, even more than the champion. Even the head of the Battle Tower had never demonstrated the feats this seemingly random child could manage. And while getting him on their side was easy, to say it was *preferable* was a lie.
But Hareta was just one part of a whole. There was so much more than the one little brat, Saturn reminded himself. He would have to take the initiative, to push forward on this on his own. He'd have to set himself up as the central pillar of this plan.
For the first time in his life, Saturn would have to be a leader.
"All right," he muttered. "All right, all right, all right...First off..." First off he would have to figure out what to do first. Getting Hareta seemed like a later step. Other things would have to fall into place first.
Mitsumi would be likely to arrange things herself. She was in a better position to view the situation from the outside, and in that case, she was on the back burner too. But Mars and Jupiter would have to be found first. They were in greater danger, immediate danger, and they would have to be prioritized. But how to track them down? Saturn couldn't look for them himself, and trying to uncover who among the remaining grunts was loyal would be far too dangerous.
Well, loyalty was probably the wrong word. After that stunt at the League, the grunts likely lost all devotion to Charon himself. At least, Saturn would hope they would have a basic self-preservation instinct anyway. But finding someone willing to disobey him out of fear for their own safety made it perhaps even more difficult, even riskier.
He would have to go with someone that nobody would suspect. Someone who could evade all detection. Someone so utterly pathetic that Charon would entirely overlook them.
And he knew exactly where to find that person.
It was simple enough to track down the supply cart's location, and thus find the grunt who'd been assigned to clean the restrooms. It was probably the only responsibility anybody, Saturn included, could trust that one with, but he was getting desperate.
"Oh, hey, Commander!" B-2 fumbled with the mop, setting it against the wall and trying to salute before the stick slipped to the floor. He grabbed it just before it could. "Haha, sorry about that. I just filled the soap dispensers, so make sure to wash your hands!"
Saturn wasn't certain what to expect, but B-2 being in a good mood wasn't something he had anticipated. Usually the visually distinctive grunt was crabby and short tempered. "Is anybody else here?"
"No sir! It's just the two of us! And the mop."
Even with that confirmation, Saturn still peeked under the stalls just in case. "All right, fine. Now, we need to have a serious conversation. Can you handle that?"
B-2's eyes widened. "Is Charon looking for some reason to fire me?" His already annoying voice peaked on the word "fire".
"You're not in trouble. I need to speak with you away from prying eyes."
The grunt smirked. "Ooh, espionage. Let me take care of this." He slid the handle of the mop through the door handle as if it would prevent the door from opening even though it opened inwards.
This was the man Saturn had to entrust a vital mission to. The man who, a few days ago, he wouldn't have thought to even entrust with lunch money. And yet somehow, though some foolishness or stubbornness or rancid determination to free Cyrus at any cost, Saturn was leaving something so important in the rubber gloved hands of B-2.
"Now then, you were saying?" The grunt leaned in conspiratorially. "I clean this room every day so I know there's no bugs in it."
"That's...surprisingly good to know." Saturn inhaled deeply through his nose, trying to make sure his body language conveyed the seriousness of the situation, and held back a sneeze at the strong scent of cleaning solution. "I need you to give me your undivided attention."
The odd smile was gone from B-2's usually slightly crazed face. "Yes, sir!" Could it be he was actually going to take this seriously?
"I have a mission for you. You cannot tell anybody. Even your squadron mates. You cannot tell another grunt. And you especially cannot tell Charon."
B-2's eyes widened, and Saturn could make out the edge of his contact lenses, one of many elements that made the grunts the utterly uniform force they were. For a moment, he wondered what the man's actual eye color was. "I mean it. I won't tell a soul. Unless you mean my pokémon. I'll tell them if I have to use them in the mission. But I won't tell any humans, and neither will they."
It was probably good to have that distinction. Maybe B-2 was smarter than he seemed, which wasn't much. At least more detail-oriented anyway. "You're to find Commander Jupiter."
At the mention of the woman, B-2's smile returned, a devious expression. "Yes sir! Getting the band back together!"
Perhaps Saturn's assessment had been too hasty. No, no, he had to dispel those thoughts. It was just a silly phrase, nothing else. "You have an unknown amount of time to accomplish this in. Charon's forces are looking for her as well, and they intend to do her harm."
"O-oh..." B-2 slumped a bit at that, smile tightening into a grimace. "I can't fight off his forces. He'll call me a traitor too. He calls her one already because she's loyal to Cyrus but..." The odd-looking man sucked in a breath. "I guess it's weird, huh? We got one guy who tried to kill us all, and we got another guy who thinks we're all disposable too, but it feels so much different, you know? I hate to say that Cyrus was right or anything, because he wasn't, but it didn't feel like he hated us."
It seemed for all the world like a confession. The grunt had likely been holding it in for some time, and here he was admitting his true loyalty, or as close as he would come to it, to the very first person who spoke to him like a human being. An odd one, but a human being just the same. And yet Saturn couldn't tip his hand. "B-2. Listen. Find Jupiter and bring her to safety. She was last spotted somewhere between the Battle Frontier and Stark Mountain. If anybody can track her down, it's you. Or rather..."
He hated to admit it, but the reason only B-2 could do it was an awkward one.
"...her Skuntank will find you."
B-2 thought for a moment before the implication set in, and he lowered his head to slowly direct his gaze behind himself. His distinctive shape, one that required him to wear a larger uniform than the rest of his frame would call for, something his mother of all people had cobbled together under the impression that her son was part of a theater group and not an apocalypse cult turned terrorist cell. "Yeah, yeah I guess it will, huh?"
The comedy of the situation, of having to rely on the most incompetent grunt's ridiculously misshapen backside to lure in a commander's pokémon, should have made Saturn laugh, he felt. But he was taking a risk with multiple lives on the line. Jupiter first and foremost, but Cyrus as well, and Saturn's own as well as B-2's. And who knew who else. Mars, almost certainly, if the plan to find Jupiter was discovered before the younger officer could be found. Even if Jupiter was successfully led to safety, knowledge of the plan would put Mars at greater risk of violent retribution, just to punish Saturn. Well, not just to do so, since Charon clearly wanted her dead anyway. But specifics would change for the worse.
"Commander? Are you all right?" It was odd to see concern from B-2, very much the sort of person to bypass such things. Not out of an innate lack of empathy, but because B-2 simply had never been the sort to think much beyond the individual moment. He was the worst person possible to have to rely on, to have to hinge multiple lives on, but he was the only one Saturn could even think of trusting, and the thought was horrifying.
In fact, it was downright stomach-turning. Choking back a heavy heave, Saturn ran for the nearest stall, silently glad he hadn't eaten much that day.
"I'm...going to take that as a no."
Saturn wanted to scream at the grunt to shut up, but nothing came out but another gag. He hoped that his brief glare over one shoulder would be enough.
B-2 waited at the stall door, and when Saturn was finally done, he silently resumed mopping the now-sullied floor. "This is really serious, huh? Unless you ate something bad. But you'd probably have, like, the day off or something if you were sick."
The commander was washing his face in the sink, wiping away any traces of his sudden panic. "You'll have to approach this more seriously than you ever have in your life. You are literally the only person in this building that I can trust." He locked eyes with B-2's reflection. "Tell me you can live up to this trust I need to place in you. Tell me you can do it. Tell me that I'm not alone in opposing Charon."
"I hate Charon!" B-2 blurted, louder than would have been safe if anyone was around. The mop in his hand hit the floor hard, even the soft side against the tile causing a heavy clang. "He's so heartless! He tried to kill a whole bunch of us because he said it would send a message. To who?" He stomped his feet in what would otherwise look like a tantrum were it not for the seriousness of the situation. "Who's going to listen to him if everyone is dead? Is he going to just keep killing us to get rid of anyone else? Because there's a lot more people who aren't Galactic grunts than who are, and even big bombs won't get rid of all of them." He shoved the mop against the door of the stall, but grabbed it again almost immediately, seeming to do it for effect. "I hate this. I hate him. I hate being under his thumb. I thought if I just kept my head down and did the cleaning like he said..." Grabbing the mop again, he shoved it back in the bucket, spreading a bit of water on the ground, which he kicked away with his foot. "...There. At least the room is clean."
Saturn was thunderstruck. To see such a change in the usually goofy grunt, to see him react in *rage* or something other than a shallow outburst, was a hefty thing to behold. Slowly, he turned around to face the grunt. "...B-2..."
B-2 looked up at him with a surprisingly feral smile. "So, when do we do this?"
The commander had to force his expression back to neutral, something so far from his impulse to look on in shock. "Are you able to devote yourself to the utmost seriousness this mission requires?"
"Sir," B-2 addressed, smile remaining exactly where it was, "if it involves getting rid of Charon, I'll do anything it takes."
"You cannot be swayed." Saturn was surprised at how blunt and commanding he could sound, especially given that the thought of his own desperation had just made him physically ill moments before. "You must find your target. You cannot get distracted and you cannot divert."
"Anything at all!"
"Even if Hareta himself shows up--"
B-2 visibly winced at the boy's name. "T-then I'll get him to help!"
Saturn inhaled deeply through his nose, tilting his head back to look over the grunt's head at the ceiling. "Hold that thought. We can't rule out that Charon may be watching Hareta's movements." He wasn't sure if this was the case at all, but having to view all angles at once, in a stark defiance of both his experience as well as any possible physics metaphor at hand, was spurring him to be overly cautious. "For now, Jupiter is your only aim."
"Yes sir! I'll do everything I can!"
"'Everything you can' needs to be enough." Saturn snapped. "A failure state is unthinkable. Do not even consider anything less than full success."
B-2's eyes widened a bit at that and he swallowed heavily. "Ab...absolutely sir." A moment later he saluted firmly. "Just point me in the direction of her last known location!"