“Ma’am, may I ask about your armor?”
“Angelwear, Rating R Two.”
“Okay,” he said, and left it at that. Angelwear looked good, and he recalled they’d tried to use her for some contract leverage. It hadn’t worked because the stuff fell apart under military tests. However, for what she was doing it was probably okay. The idea was for her not to get shot anyway.
“And you, Jessie?”
She shook her head. “I don’t have armor.”
Elke said, “I have a spare undervest. It won’t stop armor punchers, but it will stop common civilian projectiles and fragments.”
“Thanks, I’d like that.”
“Back here, then.” She indicated her room.
It took another thirty minutes of quiet but active bustle to get everything sorted and ready. They had their uniform and armor, weapons with ammo-he wasn’t sure Highland realized that, and wasn’t going to say anything, backup gear and the vehicle warmed.
Downstairs at the dock, Alex looked for the weapon testing barrel he’d been told would be provided. He glanced at Cady with raised eyebrows. She shrugged back a response he read as, “Yes, I ordered it.”
Shaman said, “Over there in the corner.” Yes, red drum, mounted on frame.
“Good. Bart, Aramis, drag it over here.”
The two men jogged over, grabbed it and heaved. The only effective ways to trap a bullet for test or practice were water or sand. Sand was easier to maintain. This was a specific silica grade and particle shape. With some scraping and yanking, they maneuvered it into place near the exit.
Alex said, “I better contact the command post, just to make sure.” He flicked his mic to phone, said, “Command Post” and waited.
It was only five seconds before he heard, “Command Post, Senior Sergeant Terkel, this is not a secure connection, how may I help you?”
“This is Marlow, Special Agent in Charge, Ripple Creek, escorting Ms Highland on her approved itinerary.”
“Yes, sir?”
“We need to test fire our weapons before departure. Please disregard the fire.”
“Sir, we can’t do that. All reports of fire must be responded to. Additionally, no firing is allowed inside the perimeter except while under direct attack, with logged evidence.”
There was nothing to be gained by arguing the point.
“Then we’ll do so as soon as we’re outside the perimeter. Respond as you wish. Marlow out.” He closed the connection at once.
As he expected, Terkel called back in seconds. “Sir, any fire will be considered a potential threat and investigated.”
“Go right ahead,” he said and disconnected again.
Shaman asked, “We’re really going to piss them off like that?”
“Yes. They need to understand we do our thing our way and not according to their policies.”
“I approve. I do wonder about repercussions.”
“We’ll play Highland against them. Two can run that game.”
He chuckled heartily. “I approve.”
Highland arrived moments later, with JessieM. Elke was with them, and one of Cady’s females. Ridling? Amanda Ridling? Yes, that was it. Highland and Jessie wore long tan skirts, with tights underneath. Some cultural more they were complying with, no doubt.
Highland smiled, nodded, made her way past and stepped aboard the vehicle. They were still using the ARPAC.
Apparently, she felt safe enough on base. Well and good for now, but she really should let Alex make that decision. She obviously knew this, and obviously didn’t care.
“Good morning, ma’am,” he said. “We are ready with your itinerary.”
“Very good,” she said, seeming quite genial now. “Will you be adjusting the route and arrival?”
“Always, and at random. We will deliver you on time, but sometimes earlier or from an unexpected direction.”
“Very well. Let’s go.” She took a seat and seemed comfortable enough, with a rollout computer on her lap. JessieM took a seat across from her.
The young woman then looked up. “I can’t get a signal in here,” she said in Alex’s general direction.
He casually tapped Bart and they started rolling.
“It’s one of the vehicle’s reinforcements, against electromagnetic effects, including pain stimulators, directional energy weapons and electrical capacitance.”
“I see,” she said. She almost seemed to be in withdrawal, denied her outlet. Perhaps he was too hard on her. It was her livelihood she was being temporarily deprived of.
The vehicle swayed in maneuvers, though it had a tight turning radius.
“We’re out the gate,” Bart announced.
“Good. Function check. Ma’am, we’re testing our weapons momentarily.”
“Oh, yes,” she nodded, looking up from her work. “I thought you had already.”
“They don’t want us to do it on base.”
She rolled her eyes. At least they both agreed on that much.
From the top turret, Aramis said, “We have a clear radius.”
“Bart, drop the hatch. Quickly, folks, with cover.”
Highland and Jessie both seemed familiar with the process and covered their ears.
The rear hatch eased down a few centimeters, then dropped with a bang that shook up dust. Elke skipped down, fired her shotgun into the dirt, swung it and slung it, raised her carbine and shot, dropped it on its sling, drew pistol and shot. She reholstered, turned and came back, as Jason stepped back and did the same with his weapons. He swapped positions with Aramis as Elke swapped with Bart while he and Shaman shot, then Aramis and Alex brought up the rear.
“Done,” he announced, and Bart, already back in the driver’s cabin, ran the ramp up at maximum speed. Aramis fired one short burst up above. Sirens were already audible on base, as the military responded to the “threat.”
Alex sighed. He’d hear about that later. There was always some territorial dispute between branches. Increasingly, the military was run by MilBu, emphasis on the Bu. All their patrols should be testing weapons before venturing outside the wire.
That wasn’t his problem at present. His problem was keeping this woman alive, along with her tagalong.
“We will be at the first location, Maharin Square, in a few minutes. We will need a few moments to check the area, and the dignitaries.”
“Keep your hands off them, please!”
“We will. They’ll be scanned, and they won’t even notice it.”
“Good. Does this bulletproof vest show?” she asked, turning her torso. She spoke loudly and clearly, obviously used to crowd noise, over the drivetrain noise.
“It doesn’t show, but be aware some styles of modern bullets can penetrate it, and it doesn’t cover extremities.”
“Yes, I know,” she said, though not as haughtily. “I am grateful for it.”
She suddenly seemed quite a bit more personable. Some of that was likely stress reduction and familiarity, but some of it was most likely also part of her act. He didn’t trust anything she said or did, and it wasn’t paranoia; she’d not gotten where she was by being nice, and they already knew she’d waste them to get in a shorter line at the coffee counter.
The city had chaotic architecture. Unlike other troubled worlds, like Salin, Mtali had been colonized by groups with money. There were religious groups with tithe support, and corporate investment to boot.
Some of it showed.
They drove along a main thoroughfare with a median park between the ways, and the houses were a strange blend of Western U.S., Colonial French and Arabic. They were tall, with courtyards, and overhangs, the upper levels built out.
But just past that were classic government-architectured blocks of apartments, with laundry hung on balconies, and parted out vehicles in the dead areas below. Alex kept a scan up. It wasn’t likely this vehicle stood out from any other military transport, but that alone might draw fire.
The commercial district next was typical of downtown. Deluxe shops and lodging in various styles from several eras spread across the blocks, but they weren’t crowded. The colonies had space from the start, and decent levels of technology. Their cities started off roomier than those on Earth and kept spreading out instead of up.