[That's one way to avoid problems with international jurisdiction. The political implications in that sentence are intriguing. They can also wait for another time.]
Sounds like you'll run into significantly less oversight here. At least in respect for how you chose to operate.
[That's a very good point. He doesn't have Vought breathing down his neck here, only some wannabe devil who, by the sound of things, doesn't even call the shots.]
Have there been escape attempts? Attempts to organize?
There's been one major escape attempt to date. It was not successful. Or, if you'll pardon some editorializing, well advised. It resulted in a good deal of property damage and ripping open a hole to... let's call it another dimension. We saw some monsters come in through the breach before it was closed. We also saw some changes in organization on the administrative level, and the mastermind behind it was tortured.
[But there's a lot of torture to go around, isn't there. Natasha doesn't bother to clarify whether or not she'd have supported a better thought out escape attempt. The answer, as it stands, would be entirely contextual.]
Organization... to a degree. Nothing formal. But we've had people trying to establish flow of information.
A lot of folks around here aren't good with authority.
[That it was unsuccessful and ill-advised doesn't mean it wasn't worth doing. Homelander would really like to meet this... mastermind.]
Yeah, I've noticed.
[He smiles, because he's sharing a room with a teenager whose whole shtick is a very loud, fortified Fuck the Police, and a woman whose soul seems to herald to the Wild West era.
You could call Homelander anti-authority too, but that's hardly the part he's meant to play to the public.]
But there are some solid team-players, too.
[Obviously he's new, so he doesn't know that many people. But there's Rogue, Spider-Man... and Natasha seems to be pretty good at it, too.]
Some. Probably comes down to the team they're working with.
[Which is something of a cop. Isn't that always what it comes down to? Who you're working with.
Or for.]
Organization gets a little complicated too, when you're not sure who's watching and when. If there's something the escape attempt highlighted it's that Lucifer doesn't know everything that's going on, so there's at least the potential for private conversations to stay private.
On the other hand, they have access to everything we're doing. Those sin lists reflect things here sometimes.
[And it's safe to assume everything on the network is insecure.]
We can do some networking without attracting suspicion, but stands to reason it'll only be so much.
[Homelander nods. Those are all good points, worthy of consideration, and as far as talk of organization and privacy goes, he thinks they're at a temporary dead end.
Different topic, then.]
Do you believe in the whole conceit of this place? The offer of "redemption"?
[Natasha shoots him a glance, sideways, and a crooked half of a smile. It doesn't entirely reach her eyes. That's not uncommon with her expressions though.]
The short answer is, basically.
[There are too many flaws and inconsistencies for her to believe it. Far too many for her to say anything as conclusive as yes. But basically.]
About as far as I think Thor or Loki are actual gods.
[Which is, again, basically. For practical intends and purposes. Not really, but that the difference it makes from her position is relatively marginal.]
The long answer is no, but it's a useful model to keep in mind. I think the logic of Heaven and Hell and Lucifer and redemption informs whatever is going on here to a degree that it's useful in those situations where we don't have more direct information.
Guess it's better to have a shared vocabulary than to keep wondering if we're stuck in a shared delusion.
[Homelander has had a lot of trouble buying into this whole setup, at first. He still doesn't, really, but it's probably better to play along than run headfirst into a mental breakdown.]
Have you noticed any... loopholes? Flaws in the system?
[Places where the reality of their situation doesn't quite line up with the narrative they're sold.]
That depends on what you mean by flaws. I would say this place isn't exactly a finely tuned machine. Things go wrong. There's... politics. Spells that don't go right. Plans that, apparently, backfire.
[As much for Lucifer as the rest of them.]
How you might turn one of those into a loophole, though, that's less apparent.
no subject
Sounds like you'll run into significantly less oversight here. At least in respect for how you chose to operate.
no subject
[That's a very good point. He doesn't have Vought breathing down his neck here, only some wannabe devil who, by the sound of things, doesn't even call the shots.]
Have there been escape attempts? Attempts to organize?
no subject
[But there's a lot of torture to go around, isn't there. Natasha doesn't bother to clarify whether or not she'd have supported a better thought out escape attempt. The answer, as it stands, would be entirely contextual.]
Organization... to a degree. Nothing formal. But we've had people trying to establish flow of information.
A lot of folks around here aren't good with authority.
no subject
Yeah, I've noticed.
[He smiles, because he's sharing a room with a teenager whose whole shtick is a very loud, fortified Fuck the Police, and a woman whose soul seems to herald to the Wild West era.
You could call Homelander anti-authority too, but that's hardly the part he's meant to play to the public.]
But there are some solid team-players, too.
[Obviously he's new, so he doesn't know that many people. But there's Rogue, Spider-Man... and Natasha seems to be pretty good at it, too.]
no subject
[Which is something of a cop. Isn't that always what it comes down to? Who you're working with.
Or for.]
Organization gets a little complicated too, when you're not sure who's watching and when. If there's something the escape attempt highlighted it's that Lucifer doesn't know everything that's going on, so there's at least the potential for private conversations to stay private.
On the other hand, they have access to everything we're doing. Those sin lists reflect things here sometimes.
[And it's safe to assume everything on the network is insecure.]
We can do some networking without attracting suspicion, but stands to reason it'll only be so much.
no subject
Different topic, then.]
Do you believe in the whole conceit of this place? The offer of "redemption"?
no subject
[She asks, and for a moment sounds tired.
She follows it with a shrug.]
The short answer is practical intents and purposes. The long one might get a little in the weeds.
no subject
[He'd like as many pieces of the puzzle as he can get, and it's not like they're pressed for time, here.]
no subject
[Natasha shoots him a glance, sideways, and a crooked half of a smile. It doesn't entirely reach her eyes. That's not uncommon with her expressions though.]
The short answer is, basically.
[There are too many flaws and inconsistencies for her to believe it. Far too many for her to say anything as conclusive as yes. But basically.]
About as far as I think Thor or Loki are actual gods.
[Which is, again, basically. For practical intends and purposes. Not really, but that the difference it makes from her position is relatively marginal.]
The long answer is no, but it's a useful model to keep in mind. I think the logic of Heaven and Hell and Lucifer and redemption informs whatever is going on here to a degree that it's useful in those situations where we don't have more direct information.
no subject
[Homelander has had a lot of trouble buying into this whole setup, at first. He still doesn't, really, but it's probably better to play along than run headfirst into a mental breakdown.]
Have you noticed any... loopholes? Flaws in the system?
[Places where the reality of their situation doesn't quite line up with the narrative they're sold.]
no subject
[As much for Lucifer as the rest of them.]
How you might turn one of those into a loophole, though, that's less apparent.