What if James Bond, but also Star Wars? John Ostrander has spoken many times on his idea of narrative alloys, on combining seemingly disparate elements to create something fresh. In the case of Agents of Empire, those elements were Star Wars and spy stories, and so we have Jahan Cross, an Imperial agent who navigates high society parties and dirty back allies with equal comfort, a man who beds exotic women, kills people who try to pull a gun on him, gets all the wonderful toys a secret agent can hope for and does it all like he was born to it.
It’s a lot of fun. There’s an understanding of both the tropes of Bond and Star Wars in the writing that makes everything flow together into an organic whole, something where the foreign element introduced doesn’t get rejected.
We are introduced to Jahan Cross as he confronts a corrupt imperial official with proof of said corruption. The confrontation turns violent and our agent hero survives through the use of bold action, some with and gadgets, as a super spy should. A typical Bond-movie introduction. After this cold opening we continue following along with the next traditional stage of a Bond movie, as our hero returns to base to receive his next mission and enjoy a tour of various gadgets that he will go on to use over the course of the coming story. He gets chewed out by his superior for being a maverick, the tech people deride him for not keeping things in good condition.
His mission is to investigate some suspicious happenings (I will not go into details regarding the intrigue of the plot) on a world not affiliated with the Empire. The people under investigations are the Stark family, who are in the droid business (of course the robotics company is being run by Starks). The Stark family has two beautiful women in it. If I said Jahan beds them both, would you find it hard to believe?
During his investigation Jahan runs into Han Solo and Chewbacca, whose presence in the cover probably helped sell this book. Solo makes note of Jahan having been one of the best pilots, and a man of honor. This explains why the smuggler with a heart of gold finds himself working with an Imperial agent.
For the remainder of the story, things progress as you would expect, with a few twists and a lot of action. There are fun side characters like the local law enforcement or certain members of the Stark family, there’s the usual instance of the spy being disowned by his employers, there’s a surprise villain and a plot of immense proportions, speeches made explaining nefarious plans and everything ends in a love scene between two people who should be traumatized by the horrific violence they’ve just participated in. A very Bond story.
There are nods to the rest of Star Wars canon here and there. Some are cheeky, like Han Solo saying he’s not the marrying type. Others are more meaningful, like Jahan Cross explaining why he believes in the Empire – and he really does. This is what makes him an interesting character: he’s an honourable, (almost) unambiguously good man who works for the ur-example of evil empires fully believing that doing so is the right thing to do. What’s also interesting about Cross is that his reasons for believing in the Empire can be argued to be both right and wrong. One might say that they are right “from a certain point of view”, a very Star Wars notion. So what happened?
Spoilers for Jahan Cross’ past, present (and future?) as well as the Star Wars Prequel trilogy:
During the last days of the Republic, Jahan Cross and his family lived in relative comfort on Coruscant. During the events covered in Revenge of the Sith’s opening, Jahan’s world is torn apart. His mother is killed and his sister is dragged by scavengers below the streets of the city. Jahan, only a boy himself, descends down after them and kills them, too late to save his sister. A brutal end to a childhood. Jahan learns, just as all the other citizens learned, that the Jedi had been manipulating the Clone Wars from behind the scenes, that they were the villains of this story and therefore responsible for his tragedy.
Jahan is of course completely unaware that Palpatine was the one behind Dooku and Grievous, that his kidnapping was a plot. Jahan is unaware that the things he believes in with such conviction, the things that give him purpose and help elevate him as a human being, as a man of honour, dignity and integrity, are lies. This paradox lies at the heart of Jahan Cross: a good man who believes in a pack of lies told by an evil man, a good man serving an evil empire for reasons that are untrue but certainly leading him to pursue a noble cause. Would he be better off knowing the truth and fighting against the Empire? Would he abandon it even if he did know, taking into account the distaste he shows for the chaos and disorder that resulted in the deaths of his loved ones? Or does he know it all to be lies and admit as much? We don’t know!
Another point worth considering is the fate of In-ga 44, the mandatory droid companion. She (very definitely she) is not given much to do. The craft of her construction is praised, but she is left minding the ship while Jahan goes on his investigation, leading to her being captured and reprogrammed by the enemy (in a scene somewhat reminiscent of David Bowman turning off HAL in 2001) and turned against Jahan.
Two competing directives flare up inside her: to kill Jahan Cross and to kill his assailant. Unable to break through this conundrum by herself, she gets an extra push from Jahan: to destroy the Eclipse station and thereby eliminate all of her targets. And this she does, but in the end a choice is left to Jahan: to save her or not.
How is that a choice? For a hero, saving your droid companion is absolutely the obvious choice, isn’t it? A daring escape, some last-minute tension and everybody gets away scot free! Of course, should one even expect everyone to make it out in a story written by the author of Suicide Squad? And indeed, there’s a problem: there’s something dangerous inside Inga’s system. Should she be returned to the Empire, she could either spread this something or enable imperial scientists to fiddle around in her and gain power the likes of which even Jahan does not wish to give to his masters (and yet he’s still loyal to them?!)
Faced with this choice, most heroes would find a way to save her. They would take the risk and be rewarded for it. Jahan Cross is not like those heroes. He leaves her behind, leaving her to be destroyed rather than taking a risk of something awful happening in the future. She’s just a droid anyway. Isn’t this the right choice, rationally speaking?
This is a 5-issue miniseries, yet it raises a great many questions about the main character, enough material to work with for a long time. This is why John Ostrander is one of my all-time favourite writers, he can find gold in every stream he dips his toes in. The artwork is provided by Stépahne Roux and Stépahne Créty, with inks by Julien Hugonnard-Bert. These names seem to indicate French heritage and I am unfamiliar with them. The style is very familiar to anyone who has read Dark Horse era Star Wars, though. Characters seen in films are recognizable as themselves, all the iconic imagery is reproduced accurately and anything new is rendered in a way that makes it feel instantly right at home in the larger universe.
Jahan Cross will return in Hard Targets.