O'Hare Subsprawl, Ares Extraterritorial Compound
January 13th, 2058
"You wanted to see me, sir?" I braced to attention in front of Lieutenant Menendez' desk.
He looked up at me over the several floating holodisplays of data being projected in front of him, and tapped a command into the touch-sensitive desktop to close them. "Trooper Stone.
Why have I been informed to make sure you are available for an interview at the MP compound here at 1030 hours?"
Only long practice at dealing with angry, suspicious authority figures kept my face or voice from twitching when I heard that an MP Hold was apparently out on me. "I don't know, sir. There have been no incidents."
He steepled his fingers and glared at me suspiciously. "When I find out what happened, and I
will find out, I will rack your ass twice. Once for whatever your offense was, and once again - and far more harshly - for lying to me about it."
"Sir. I haven't even had an off-base pass in over two weeks. We've been on near continuous op cycle." I responded, still trying to figure out what the hell was going on here.
"Don't tell me what our operational schedule has been,
Trooper, it's not as if I didn't help
write it." he bit out his words. "So, you don't know anything and nothing has happened."
"No sir." I said.
"And you have no idea why your favorite partner-in-crime Corporal Mierson has also been ordered to report for interview, at a separate time?"
"No sir." I repeated yet again.
"Or Trooper First Class Jeffers? Trooper Adamson? And even Sergeant Sinclair? Again, all at separate times?"
I blinked in realization. "Sir, did you say the entirety of Team Three has been ordered to report for interview, but no one else from our platoon has?"
"Do you have malfunctioning cyberaudio, Trooper?" he huffed impatiently. "Yes, I just
said that."
"Then this may be counter-intelligence related, sir." I continued thinking out loud. "Off the top of my head, the only thing we have in common that that the rest of the platoon doesn't is that we'd been tasked for the emergency extraction operation of 10 December last year, to support a Priority 1-A clandestine op of unspecified nature. None of the other people that went with us that night are back on duty yet, and at least one other team from the platoon has been along on every other op Team Three's deployed for."
"And absolutely nothing happened on any of your off-duty time, of course." he said skeptically, before his expression relaxed a fraction. "Well, if it is counter-intelligence related then you will of course cooperate with any request they make, and debrief them about anything they wish to know." He thought for an instant and continued. "Make certain to ask, explicitly, what you are authorized to tell me about your interview afterward. I don't want to risk being exposed to information I'm not cleared for, but I do obviously want to be kept in the loop about what you've been up to as much as possible."
"Yes sir." I acknowledged.
"Then you are dismissed." he concluded, and then reactivated his desktop and turned his attention back to the data displays without another word.
I about-faced and unassed the Lieutenant's cubicle office without another word, and then vanished myself out of the admin building.
"Did the Lieutenant mention anything?" Sinclair asked me as I returned to our squad bay.
"I've got an MP 'request for interview' at 1030." I replied. "Outside of that, and his general suspicions, nothing."
"Sorry I couldn't give you a heads-up about that, but I only just got told myself." he nodded. "I was hoping that at least- never mind."
"Something else going on
besides this? What now?" I said, throwing myself into a nearby seat.
"Your promotion order should be coming through in a few weeks." Sergeant Sinclair shocked me with a grin. "Congratulations in advance, Trooper First Class Stone. But don't pin it on just yet, you'll have to wait until after it's officially on the chip."
"I haven't even been here for two months!" I said.
"No, but training time counts so you'll soon have finished your first year in Ares. And you'd made Sergeant in the CAS Army before you separated, so after your first year in you're eligible for veteran's accelerated advancement for the first two pay grades here." he explained. "You still need a recommendation from your chain of command, of course, but I was more than happy to write you one."
"Well, damn. Thank you, sir, I had no idea they even had that rule, or that you were considering me for it." I said gratefully.
"You keep your head and think fast in a crisis, you're alert to what goes on around you, and everything you touch just seems to run a little smoother or calmer than it would have without you. You're natural NCO material, Mitchell, and Knight Errant needs to develop as many of those as possible." he said warmly.
"Every army does, sir." I agreed.
"Now let's just hope whatever this 'interview' thing is about doesn't frag it up for you." Sinclair acknowledged.
"Or for any of us." I agreed.
Today was a day for routine fatigues so we'd scattered around the compound working on our individual tasks, so I didn't have a chance to touch base with any of the others before the time soon enough arrived that I had to report for my 'interview'. I arrived at the MP post in my garrison BDUs to be sent around by the front-desk NCO to somewhere in the secured section, and entered what was clearly an interior guard post to be greeted by several large, imposing troopers in security armor almost as thick if nowhere near as fully-featured as our spec-ops hardsuits, armed with shocksticks and submachine guns and all staring at me through their featureless helmet faceplates like so many sentry turrets.
"Trooper Mitchell Stone, reporting as ordered." I said to the one with the sergeant's insignia.
"Remove your sidearm, gunbelt, and PDA and place them on the table." he answered curtly, and I noticed that the two guys flanking him already had their hands on their SMG grips as I very carefully and deliberately reached down, unbuckled my web belt, and placed my sidearm and mag pouches where I was told to. I bit back the temptation to ask them if I was under arrest- if I actually was then I was certain they'd tell me, and if I wasn't yet then I didn't want to put the idea in anyone's head.
"Check in at the security terminal." he continued, pointing at it, and I went through the full routine of slot my credstick for ID, give my palmprint, and this scan even went for retinal prints.
"ID confirmed." the terminal finally reported, as it put up a full readout of my personnel data and biometrics on a display for review.
"Follow me." the nameless sergeant continued and the security door at the other side of the room slid open and my heart sank as I realized that I was being taken to the detention area.
"They're waiting for you in the detainee interview room." the sergeant answered my unasked question, and stood aside as we reached the room normally used for having guys who'd just been dragged in by the MPs to be sweated by the duty officer for 'What the fuck was that all about?' before it was decided to either formally write them up on charges or just boot them back to their platoon leader for less formal disciplinary action.
And as I entered to see two expressionless people in fancy suits and wearing tinted datagoggles expertly disguised as high-end sunglasses, I realized that I'd guessed 100% correct about this being some kind of counter-intelligence matter.
"Trooper Stone." the lead agent said, pointing at a chair. "Take a seat."
"May I ask for identification, sir?" I requested politely after I was seated. "They didn't tell me who I was going to be interviewed by."
"Commendably cautious." the lead agent conceded marginally, and they both slotted their credsticks into the table and let the data-display there show me that they were indeed both duly accredited and authorized employees of Knight Errant Security Services, with counter-intelligence authority and full clearances for anything at my level and quite a few things above it. No names, of course, just meaningless-to-me ID numbers.
This entire interview room was wired for sight and sound, so Agent Smooth here didn't need to do anything as dramatic as switching on a tape recorder. "This interview is about the events of 10 December 2057-" he began dispassionately, and with his partner just standing behind him doing a silent stare at me throughout I was quickly yet efficiently run through a debrief of the entire spec-ops retrieval mission I'd jumped in on for my first night here. He was smooth enough at it that my asshole almost unclenched from Pucker Condition Alpha by the end of it, except that I was dealing with the increasing suspicion that Sam the Silent back there wasn't just backing up his boss with an intimidation act but was actually a security mage and magically studying my aura to detect even otherwise invisible fluctuations in my emotions. To tell if I was lying with even more sensitivity than an advanced voice-analysis polygraph could - especially given that my trauma damper and wired reflexes meant that I could have selectively muted response to biological stress cues. Which sure came in handy when playing cards with unlucky UCAS grunts.
And a 'Did you happen to notice anything and you'd better blank it the hell out of your memory if you did' counter-intelligence debrief after even some kind of ultra-hush black op didn't quite mandate
that level of subtle interrogation. Not even when I'd been on Ranger QRFs backing up the CAS Navy SEALs and in the periphery of
that black-ops bullshit had something like this ever happened. Plus, that mission had been over a
month ago. Paperwork did not simultaneously that slowly and still drew this level of urgency. Nobody short of Damien Knight
ever had too many wage mages for their staff, those guys didn't ever stand around doing make-work when there was real shit to be doing.
So by the time that Agent Smooth over there hit the wrap-up, I was already at least halfway mentally prepared for it. I drew upon the breath control and meditation stuff they'd taught me in CAS Army sniper school to help me as I stuck to the rhythm that the whole interrogation was meant to set up in me so that the last few questions, the really important ones, could be snuck in as routine follow-up questions they supposedly just asked everybody.
"Have you during the course of your duties with Ares seen anything that you think should be brought to the attention of counter-intelligence?" the lead agent asked.
"The regs say I should report every little thing, but practically speaking you probably don't want to be bugged with routine chickensh- uh, trivialities." I deliberately stumbled so that if the wagemage over there picked up on any anxiety, they'd think it was embarassment.
He nodded matter-of-factly and asked the second question. "Have you ever been approached by anyone claiming to be Ares corporate personnel deployed in a sensitive capacity without their providing proper authentication?"
"No sir." I answered frankly, keeping myself as centered as possible. After all, Captain Ravenheart hadn't
claimed to be anything to me. We'd
eavesdropped on her mentioning to Sinclair that she'd been in FireWatch, but that hadn't been the question Agent Smooth had asked or even halfway near it.
"Have you ever knowingly acted against the corporate interests of Knight Errant Security Services or Ares Macrotechnology Corporation in a non-trivial capacity?" he probed.
"No sir." I answered again, truthfully, and he gave the same mechanical nod he'd given me to all my other answers and paused briefly in thought.
"I think we've got everything we need." the silent guy said, the first sound he'd made since I'd entered the room.
"Agreed." the first one replied to his partner. "All right, Trooper, that concludes our interview and debrief. You may return to your normal duties."
"Um, the Lieutenant wanted to know if I was in trouble for anything, and also ordered me to ask what about this interview was I allowed to tell him." I asked as I stood up.
"You may inform your commanding officer that the matter has been satisfactorily resolved and all relevant personnnel have been cleared, and that our debrief was related to follow-up on Operation POPCORN of 10 December. If he desires further details, he may submit his request to us through channels." Agent Smooth repeated as if he were reading off a cue card.
"Understood, sir." I agreed, and then I unassed the area as fast as I possibly could without spooking anyone.
I had to risk comparing notes with Sinclair about the 'routine follow-up questions', making like I was just the new guy to the corp wondering if that shit was usual and asking the old hand about it, to find out that they
hadn't asked him the one about 'being contacted by someone claiming to be all hush-hush in Ares without proper ID'. That had been the thing I'd been most worried about - thankfully it had come to mind only after I'd left the interview room, or else no way that security mage wouldn't have noticed - because it was a question he couldn't possibly spoof on, and if our answers had been different from his then we'd be fucked. Fortunately, they hadn't bothered asking him about it.
In hindsight that was probably because they
already knew that he was personally acquainted with Captain Ravenheart - it was on their service records that they'd once worked together, after all. Which would mean that there'd be no way to ask the Sergeant that question at all without a giant tip-off as to what they were really interested in, and it was pretty obvious that our 'debrief' had been staged the way it had for the purpose of gathering intel from us without giving us any clue of what they even wanted to gather.
So someone up the chain had already found out that Captain Ravenheart had met us and spent some time alone with our fire-team, almost certainly from the Lieutenant's official post-mission report and him recognizing that her armor was at one time top-line Ares special-forces issue and thinking that was a detail worthy of writing down. That got them to rush out the counter-intel team here to get us and find out if she'd tried to leak X to us, all the while using the convenient coincidence of our also having been on that Operation POPCORN retrieval to get us thinking about how the secret they were trying to bury was somewhere else entirely. Pretty slick stuff, and if Ravenheart had trusted us to actually tell us whatever they presumably were afraid she might be telling people we'd have been scragged. But again in hindsight, that must have been exactly why she'd told the Sergeant she didn't want to involve him or any of us even a little bit. Thank God.
Now all I had to do was make damn sure that a certain snoopy nose I was starting to love like a bossy twin sister didn't get her ass in a crack the size of the Grand Canyon by not knowing when to quit snooping, which is why I'd made sure to ask her to come out on a Strip crawl with me the next minute we got some off-duty time.
"So do you get it?" I finished, after explaining my whole chain of reasoning while we had dim lighting, a private booth, a pair of well-practiced prison whispers, and a whole shit ton of loud music off the dance floor to hopefully defeat any eavesdroppers. "Whatever the hell is going on there, we don't want
any of it."
"I was starting to reach the same conclusion." she began. "Okay, you know that they told us nothing about the black ops team we rescued that night. But they still had to give us photos of their faces in case we needed to identify bodies."
"You saved their mug shots." I rolled my eyes. "We should rename you Cat, because your curiosity's gonna get you-"
"I didn't actually Matrix-search them or anything!" she protested. "I know better than that. I haven't done
anything with them. They were just in a 'maybe someday this will fit with some other piece I trip over' collection."
"Yeah, well, don't put anything from today in there." I repeated. "
Please. It's not just your ass in a crack, although I'd still hate that, but the entire team's."
"My point is that they data-vacuumed our PDAs while we had them checked in at the gate." she continued. "I know they did to mine, at least, according to the checksums I ran afterwards." she agreed. "And I'd had those mugshots
on my PDA. Encrypted, relabeled and stuffed in a folder disguised as family photos, but still there. That wouldn't have stopped a sophisticated enough image recognition search tool, though... and those images were still in my PDA's data drive after my interview."
"And if they'd really given a damn about Operation POPCORN, or even just known who those four guys had
been, they'd have wiped the photos with bit-bleach the instant they found 'em. Meaning that my theory about how that whole thing was just a smokescreen for the last couple of questions-" I continued.
"Has been 100% confirmed." she agreed ruefully. "Thank
God I followed Sinclair's orders to not only dump but also data-shred the comm buffers in our helmets after our little eavesdropping incident."
"I hope to God that those counter-intel guys don't wonder why our team's helmets are the only ones that didn't save logs that day." I thought out loud.
"Oh, I understand that at least a third of trooper helmets randomly distributed across the platoon had data-log problems on that particular bug hunt." she grinned at me. "Must have been an intermittent software fault."
"Thank God your curiosity is only matched by your paranoid excess." I exhaled relievedly. "So, it looks like
if we don't poke the bear any further then we'll actually get away with it."
"Yeah." she agreed. "And yeah, part of me still wants to ask
What the hell?, but at this juncture I agree with you and the rest of me that's telling me
You don't want to know."
"Sorry to have underestimated you." I apologized.
"Eh, fussing over your friends and checking in on them even when they wish you wouldn't is what friends
do." she replied. "I can't really complain."
"Especially not given how often you keep doing it to
us." I snarked back, and we both chuckled quietly.
* * * * *
Chicago Containment Zone, UCAS
February 8th, 2058
After that scary brush with some kind of high-end corporate plumber squad, things got back to normal. Adamson and Jeffers had accepted the counter-intel guy's story at face value, they'd gone especially soft on Sinclair in the interview because he'd be the easiest to tip off so he wasn't too worried, and that left me and Rebecca to be the ones who stayed a little tense as we tried to figure out if we were still under suspicion or being watched or anything. But no suspicious tracers or bugs turned up in our company-issued electronics, no new faces turned up around us on the job and nobody else we already knew had any big change in their pattern, and even the Lieutenant unclenched his butthole once he was reassured that the whole 'interview' thing was just them doing some post-op infosecurity and not anything that could track any dirt onto his clean record.
But now I was left standing in the dimly lit atrium of an abandoned apartment building at night, staring over my sidearm's sights at a scabrous, hairless, near-skeletal humanoid that was staring back at me with decidedly hostile intent. Him and all his friends had made us the instant we'd stepped in off the street, their astral sight alowed them to pinpoint me in the unlit nighttime gloom of the building's ruined interior even more easily than my advanced helmet optics allowed me to see them. Bits of rotten human flesh were still plainly visible in their mouth, still trapped between needle-tipped teeth. Only our sealed hardsuits kept the charnel smell of their breath from assaulting our nostrils. Although the bulk of my attention was focused on the mixed bag of rifles and shotguns that the squad of ghouls had aimed at us.
"Ares." the lead ghoul of the pack of guards that had come fading out of the woodwork as soon as we'd stepped through the front doors said disgustedly. "What, you finally come back to finish the job?"
"Easy guys." Rebecca pleaded as reasonably as she could, her own assault rifle half-raised. "We don't need to do this."
In 2011 the phenomenon known as 'the Awakening' had suddenly brought what even the scientific community now agreed could only be fairly termed as "magic" spontaneously into being - or, if you believed the theorists who talked about ancient lost ages of lore and stuff, had returned it into being after a long hiatus. Mankind had spent all the decades since doing their best to come to terms with all the changes that it had wrought on the world. And in addition to things like 'mages and shamans were now not only actual professions but heavily recruited by corporate headhunters' and 'a certain percentage of humanity had spontaneously 'goblinized' into humanoid sub-races formerly known only in fantasy fiction such as elves, dwarves, orks, and trolls', there had also been the spontaneous mutation/re-emergence/what-have-you of Awakened animal and plant life. You didn't just have bald eagles anymore, you had magical thunderbirds. Swimming out in the deep ocean alongside the whales where what could only be called leviathans. High-end security companies bred and trained fire-breathing hellhounds as guard dogs now, not just Dobermans.
And one strain of immunodeficiency virus had mutated into the Human-Metahuman Vampiric Virus, which upon infection a human or metahuman being would alter them even further into outright supernatural predators such as vampires, wendigos... or ghouls. And the worst part of the whole deal is that only a percentage of ghouls lost their faculties in the transition and became the stereotypical ravening man-eating monsters of myth.
The remainder of them
kept their intelligence, their memories, everything that let them know and feel as if they'd once been human - and unlike insect spirit possession it was still
them in there, still their own metaphysical whatever-you-called-a-soul, as opposed to being hollowed out and eaten by another spirit entirely. They could remember everything about their old lives and how it had felt to live them, still be in touch with their old emotions and sensitivies... even all the while they still kept the only partly biological metabolism, the simultaneously perceiving and interacting on the physical and astral planes both of any other dual-natured paranatural critter... and the inescapable need to consume human carrion in order to survive. Oh, and let's not forget the part where except for a brief and rapidly-aborted experiment at the UCAS trying to give them citizenship status in the early 2050s, HMHVV infectees were not recognized as legally human, or legally existing at all.
So yeah. It was no wonder that ghouls tended to be really defensive and bitter about it. For them, Chicago turning into a city full of bugs only meant that the outside world that had been ignoring them at best and trying to exterminate them at worst now had fewer humans trying to do the job, and an absence of personal malice from the bugs when they were trying it.
"I'm sure it would be a lot easier for you corpo-freaks to finish the job if we disarmed first, huh?" one of the ghoul militiamen spat back at us.
"Look, guys, we don't want any trouble." Rebecca kept talking. "All we need is to do is to get to the roof to spot from for a little while, and then we're gone like the wind."
"Spot for what, corpgirl?" the angry ghoul pack's leader spat at us. "The artillery fire you want to call in on us 'flesh-eating freaks'?"
I was more than alert enough to the vibe to pick up that the main reason they hadn't pulled any triggers yet is because they didn't like the odds. Especially since it was vastly unlikely they'd been able to score any APDS ammo in here and an off-the-rack AK-97 wasn't going to do much to crack our hardsuits without it even at point-blank range, while all we'd need to do is get a couple of grenades off and the entire antechamber would be full of ghoul hamburger. But they were clearly feeling
very defensive right now, and trying to come on too soft like Rebecca was trying would only make them even more suspicious. So I played right into my expected role as a heartless corporate mercenary and decided it was time for bad cop to back up good cop.
"Guys, if we wanted to knock down this building of yours then we could have just called in the howitzers from
outside the front door." I matter-of-factly pointed out. "We want to camp the rooftop today to kill someone
else, or did you not notice that this piece I'm hauling around right now was not optimized for short-range work?"
The older ghoul standing behind him cast an eye at the 14mm semi-automatic anti-vehicle rifle I had slung on my back and nodded. "Sniper team, huh? You don't have LOS on the Refuge from this roof, so... Goose Island?"
"That's right, it's pirate-stomping day." I grinned wickedly. "We roll up top, I get my head count, then we just RTB and hoist some beers. Nobody's scheduled you for anything."
"You can't shoot from this building." one of the female ghouls standing standing in the rear ranks shook her head firmly. "We aren't just a bunch of savages hiding in a hole, we're building an
enclave here. We've got our supplies here, a communications node- even our children!"
"The Cabrini Refuge is expanding?" Rebecca leaned forward curiously as if trying to will an answer out of the air, because we were almost two blocks from 'Ghoultown' - the site of the old Cabrini Green housing complex that had been a onetime Mayor of Chicago's attempt to create a ghoul sanctuary during the brief period of legal recognition of their status by the UCAS government - and that was a bit far out for a satellite outpost.
"Diversifying." one of them answered, simultaneously with their squad leader's curt "That's none of your concern!"
"Okay, okay." Rebecca said, raising one hand in a peaceful geature and taking a step back. "Bravo One-Actual, this is Topside Lead." she continued into her helmet comm, deliberately letting the ghouls overhear her end of the call. "This building's looking a little unstable inside, I don't want to chance using the roof here. We are relocating to the south to find an alternate setup point, estimate plus ten mikes on the timeline."
"Relocate acknowledged." Lt. Menendez' voice came back impatiently.
"Pick up the pace, the whole op is waiting on you."
"Topside is oscar mike, out." she replied and then cut her mike.
"Thanks. Door's that way." the seniormost ghoul said gruffly, and we warily stepped back and turned to leave.
"Shit, that was a little tense." the designated marksman from our platoon's Team Two - I didn't even remember his name - breathed out as we set up back in the street and started moving down the block to find another building to snipe from. Two long-riflemen and two other troopers as spotters had been detached from two separate fire-teams to provide cover for today's operation against one of the most psychotic band of pirates still operating in the Containment Zone.
Goose Island was a 160-acre artificial island formed at the intersection of the north branch of the Chicago River and a canal that had been dug sometime in the 1800s right across the one side of what had been a peninsula. It was the hangout of the 'Jolly Rogers', a group of psychofreaks who had snagged themselves a couple of old harbor patrol boats that used to belong to Eagle Security - the security firm that had had the municipal police contract for Chicago and still had it for the rest of Cook County - and used them and some tricked-out hovercraft they'd scored to make themselves the uncontested kings of the water on the north half of the city. They 'subcontracted' some local groups of desperados and thugs to take tolls at the river bridges and backed up any challengers to the toll-takers in return for a substantial cut, did smuggler runs of goods up and down the waterway for those customers who preferred the risks of dealing with the Rogers to the risks of going overland in Bug City, and otherwise robbed, raped, and murdered anybody else they caught walking too close to the shoreline.
In short, they were a bunch of completely chipped-out raider skezzbags that even the cockroaches wouldn't lower themselves to puke on, and while I still had no idea how Command generated our strategic targeting priorities from day-to-day it was pretty obvious that they'd finally pissed someone off enough to get put on our ops schedule of people we needed to go shoot. But since they were chipped-out raider skezzbags that might have scored enough heavy weapons from Eagle's old armory or from Zone gunrunners to have shoulder-fired SAMs handy, as well as the possibility of captives still alive on the island, that ruled out the simple solution of just calling in the gunships to rocket-ripple all of Goose Island from end to end.
And that's why two of the best marksmen in the platoon had been issued Ares' own version of the Ranger Arms SM-3 long-distance anti-vehicle precision rifle and detached to go find a rooftop about half a kilometer away with good sight lines on Goose Island and stand by to snipe anybody trying to operate a crew-served or air-defense weapon, so as to clear the way for the rest of the platoon to come in low on the Skyhawks and fast-rope down for some good old-fashioned house-to-house cleaning. We'd had to move a little close to the Cabrini Refuge to do it, but despite our encounter with the wary neighbors it did at least have the benefit of making it very unlikely that we were also going to pick a building with a bug infestation. And since inserting directly to a rooftop by helicopter would have required getting close enough to risk waking up our targets, we'd had to be dropped off a few blocks further back and hoof it here the whole way. It wasn't any shock that the Lieutenant had been getting impatient.
"Topside One, setting up." I called away as I got into a comfortable firing position laying on my blanket, as Rebecca settled in alongside to spot for me. On the other corner of our building, the other two troopers were doing the same. We'd wedged the rooftop door shut behind us and then put a screamer alarm on it, so we were free to concentrate on what was in front of us. It was a bit thin for security but the Lieutenant hadn't wanted to divert any more troopers away from the main action, so here we were out all by ourselves.
"Topside Two, setting up." our partner team's rifleman called out on local-net.
"Bravo One-Actual, Topside is all set." Rebecca reported in to the platoon net. In addition to my spotter she was also team leader of our four-man group, seeing as how she was senior NCO out of all four of us.
"Finally." the Lieutenant acknowledged.
"Topside, keep weapons tight. Start marking targets and report."
The Jolly Rogers weren't all asleep at the switch - after all, another thing that liked to pick through the shoreline were Roach and Mosquito spirits, so you wanted to keep at least a few lookouts awake - but they were anything but a tightly organized military unit. The body heat of their few sentries and lookouts shone in our advanced imaging scopes as clearly as if it were day, and while they
did have assault cannons - bipod-mounted 20mm semi-auto anti-vehicle weapons even heavier than my rifle, that could only be hip-fired or shoulder-fired if you were either augmented or a troll - that could do noteworthy damage even to an armored Skyhawk if it connected, they'd first need the chopper to be doing a hover right overhead before they were at all likely to hit.
Not that we were going to let them try.
"Bravo One-Actual, we mark two sentries with assault cannons. No manpads visible, repeat, no manpads visible. Note that one sentry is a troll, so they've still got native thermographic vision capability even if we assume no cyber or optics." Rebecca finally reported.
"Our drone imagery confirms what you're seeing. We are starting our descent now." the Lieutenant replied.
"As soon as you hear our rotor wash, Topside is free to execute. Bravo One-Actual, out."
I began my breath control regime and let my bioware damp any adrenaline spikes before they even started. I called and picked my first target, and let the smartlink's ballistic computer talk to my cerebellum through my neural interface as I waited for-
"Rotors." Rebecca said calmly as the
thup-thup-thup of the approaching Skyhawks began to become faintly audible. "Topside, we are weapons free."
I thought the firing command through my 'link and let the electro-mechanical firing mechanism pull the trigger for me with superhuman precision and zero jostle at all, and felt nothing but recoil and satisfaction as the 14mm round ripped straight through the torso - no showoff headshots today - of the first sentry and dropped him like a stone. The echos hadn't faded before my rifle finished cycling and chambering my follow-up shot, and with the other sentry already as dead as mine from our other sniper our spotters both got into the act as they marked particular members of the Jolly Rogers scrambling out of their habitats for attention based on looking either like leaders, mages, or just holding too big a gun. Then the scope started to be cluttered by friendlies as our own helos arrived and the rest of the platoon fast-roped on down to start their end of the party, so we took the opportunity to catch a breath and reload.
"How's about we start ventilating boat engines so nobody gets out that way?" I asked. "Help keep the cork in the bottle?"
"Good idea, do that." Rebecca answered, and with a few quick shots we made sure nothing floating at anchor at the Jolly Roger's boat park was going to go anywhere soon, not with 14mm holes punched nearly through their outboards or their helm controls. Which turned out to be a good precaution, because less than three minutes into the assault the few surviving Jolly Rogers broke and ran, and the quicker of them actually did make it to the boat park just ahead of their pursuers - only to get trapped on the deck of a non-functioning watercraft and blasted into the water like clay pigeons off a rail a few moments later.
"Teams One Through Three, set up on the perimeter as marked and hold. Four and Five, sweep through the buildings again and make sure we don't have survivors. Team Six, secure the LZ." the Lieutenant said. "
Topside, secure from overwatch and light your locator beacon, I'll send over Flight Four to pick you up."
"And that's a wrap." I said matter-of-factly as I stood up and safed and cleared my rifle, then slung it over my back and got my sidearm out.
"You two hold here and guide in our ride, we'll go pick up our trash." Rebecca said, and we both headed to go unblock the rooftop door and pick up the motion sensor we'd left covering our retreat. Our eyebrows both rose as the opening door reveal another squad of ghouls standing at the bottom of the stairwell, who turned to look back up at us when the squeal of the rusty door opening had alerted them. Apparently they'd all been facing in the
other direction.
"You guys were lookin' out for us?" I asked, mildly surprised.
"The Jolly Rogers are -
were - scumbags barely half a step above maggots." one of the ghouls nodded back. "So yeah, we talked it over and figured that even if you are corpo dicks it'd still be to the general benefit if nobody jostled your elbows while you were busy ventilating their skulls."
"Well, thanks." Rebecca acknowledged them warmly. "We've got a chopper ride coming for us right off the rooftop, so you guys can head on back if you want. It was nice working with you."
"All right then, we're gone." the lead ghoul nodded back at us, and our unofficial escort quietly decamped without another word.
"They say fences make good neighbors, but looks like the bugs are making some too." I observed as we strolled back to rejoin the rest of our group and watched our ride come swooping in for a pickup.
"That definitely surprised me." she agreed as we boarded the bird and rejoined the rest of the unit. "Knight Errant is
really not popular with the Chicago ghoul community. When Special Order 162 was passed giving them legal recognition, KE had been the security corp hired for a temporary security contact on the Cabrini housing development because Eagle Security - the Chicago policing unit - was foot-dragging heavily."
"And then the UCAS government blamed
us for Special Order 162's repeal barely two months later, claimed it was because Knight Errant hadn't renewed the temporary contract that it was 'not feasible' to continue securing Cabrini." Sergeant Sinclair broke in, as they'd happened to send the same helicopter hauling out the rest of our permanent team to pick us up too. "Scapegoated us to cover up the fact that they just didn't want to spend the money any longer to actually protect the people they'd promised to protect, let alone assign their own troops to do it."
I was pretty sure from what I remembered going in the news at that time, even if that was only shortly after I'd joined the Army, that Sinclair was not being entirely accurate about who'd quit on what job first. But then again, none of us had been there - and it's not as if the network news wasn't at least half bullshit even on a good day. So who knows, he might actually have been right that KE had been scapegoated as corpo dicks to draw fire away from the UCAS being government dicks instead of vice versa. Hey, stranger things that had happened.
"I'm just bummed that we didn't notice we were being trailed. One wasp spirit picking the wrong building to lurk in the upper floors of and we'd all have been lunch. We were lucky it was local militia and not bugs." I thought out loud.
"I went to bat for you with the Lieutenant about that." Sinclair surprised us. "You don't take a four-man team alone on foot through the Zone unless you're FireWatch, and I think even they found it rough going that one time." he almost joked. "But detaching a security detail to go with you or allowing you your own AFV to make infil and exfil with would have meant coordinating for extra assets outside the platoon, and he didn't want to-" He huffed. "The Lieutenant said the risk was minimal when he overruled my suggestion, and as it turned out he was right, but we still shouldn't have rolled dice like that just for convenience's sake."
"I could argue that decision either way if I really had to," I nodded back, "but honestly, right now I'm too bushed to try. Op-tempo's been harsh recently, and it was a late night tonight in addition."
"You're not just whistling Dixie." Adamson chimed in from his seat across the Skyhawk's passenger bay. "Us, the UCAS intervention teams, even the line grunts, we've all suddenly been working overtime. And mostly against
raiders, too."
"Not that scumbags like that don't have it coming, but weren't they originally paying for us to kill bugs?" Jeffers thought out loud.
Nobody had an answer for that. But at the moment we were headed back to base camp and some well-earned rest in our bunks, and that was priority number one right now.
* * * * *
Glenview Naval Air Station, Ares Extraterritorial Compound
February 19th, 2058
After we stomped the Jolly Rogers, things changed.
First, we got an entire week stood down, with the only task at hand to spend a day packing our unit's equipment and then a rest and recuperation leave while Knight Errant closed out the encampment we'd set up at the UCAS Air Force section of O'Hare and re-opened it at a compound we were setting up and leasing at the rebuilt Glenview NAS.
But when we got there we realized that this had been more than just a facilities move. Until now the Ares presence at the UCAS Containment Zone had largely been limited to our company of Ares Rapid-Response Troops, and our aviation and support elements, and some intel support and science teams that the UCAS was renting from us elsewhere. But when we arrived at Glenview we saw that Ares' contributions to the bug war had just been
heavily reinforced. They were shipping in not just spec-ops guys like us but full-on armored cav and infantry formations normally more suited to things like the large-scale competitive military exercises in the Desert Wars or a full-on 'reconquer this Third World nation' mercenary op. Even weirder, the formations they'd shipped in
hadn't brought the sort of facilities intended for a long deployment like ours - no prefab barracks, no bunks, no furniture. They were living in tents and eating out of mess trailers and maintaining and servicing their vehicles out of field shelters and hasty cradles just like they were still on campaign in the bush. There must have been almost a brigade of Knight Errant troops here, if not more, and word was that other large detachments were staging at some of the UCAS military encampments down south and west of the Wall.
And it wasn't just us. Every military runway at Glenview and O'Hare had been jammed for days with all the transport planes bringing people in from all over the UCAS. Rebecca was even able to get the word from some guys in the comm center that the entire UCAS 101st Airmobile division had been ordered to mount up and stage its ass to Chicago on 72-hour alert, and we could already see the clustered tents and field prefabs of their own encampment setting up out on ground that had been hastily commandered from the local suburban community's golf course and parkland. Truck convoys and freight trains were pulling in around the clock, and everybody was busting hump to move entire mountains of boots, bullets, and beans off of them and into warehouses, to then be repacked and combat-loaded and readied to ship out again. An entire nation as well as the world's foremost mil-tech AAA megacorporation must have both strained their rapid mobilization and deployment capacities to the limit to get this done this quickly, even if they'd started a couple of weeks ago.
And the entirety of Bravo Company had just been ordered to report to a nearby hangar, along with as many of the newcomer Ares troops as could fit in there, for a briefing.
"Jesus Christ, it looks like a base in England the week before D-Day." I swore, looking around wonderingly.
"I'm certain that's exactly what it is." Sinclair nodded to us. "They gave us a week off to rest and refit because we've been on an active op-tempo for months, and now they need us in top shape for a major operation. Add that plus all these reinforcements who are clearly here and setting up for a high-density short-term logistics train, but with that much spare ammunition being combat loaded in proportion?"
"Great, the big boys in Washington got tired of holding the Wall on attrition and think they can win the war with one big surge and purge." Jeffers swore disgustedly as we reached our designated row of folding chairs set up in the hangar-turned-improvised-auditorium. "What makes them think that's going to work any better than the
last time they tried it?"
"Final call! Close the doors!" an officer's voice rang out on the loudspeakers, and the wide-open hangar doors began to slide shut behind us on hydraulics. Nobody else said anything or moved until the final
THOOM of the doors slamming shut sounded.
"Everyone without prior specific authorization, deactivate your personal electronics! This room is undergoing data-seal in two minutes!" the order came out on the PA system again, and we all did as instructed. At two minutes to the second the signals intelligence and security guys lit off their short-range jammers, and did everything else they normally did to try and keep anyone from unauthorized recording and/or transmitting from a chamber this large and this packed full of strangers - or at least as much as could practicably be done.
"All personnel, you are hereby given official notice that the following briefing is to be considered LEVEL EPSILON secure material and that your presence at this operational briefing consents to your being placed under full communications blackout until the commencement of the operation." the annunciator continued.
"You are reminded that disclosure of Epsilon material without explicit authorization is punishable not only by immediate discharge from all Ares employment but also by full corporate sanctions. Unless otherwise directed, Epsilon protocols will remain in effect for a seventy-two hour period."
"They're putting us in on-base lockdown for three whole days?" Jeffers whispered from where he was sitting down the row, before Rebecca nudged him hard with an elbow.
"ATTENTION ON DECK!" the command suddenly rang out, and we all popped out of our chairs and stood to precisely as instructed. Our platoon leader was sitting with us, but all the officers in the rank of captain or above were up on stage. The only two I even began to recognize were our company commander - who I'd only seen three times since I'd reported in - and our attached aviation company commander. We also had several visiting observers, one of them a brigadier general, from the UCAS Army. My eyes noted that the seniormost officer up there in Ares uniform was a two-star general... but wait, if he was in the row of seats, then who was giving the brief-
And then my jaw fought not to drop as a nondescript man in an Ares garrison officer tunic stepped forward to the microphone, as one of the big viewscreens behind him did a close-up so we could see him more clearly from the back. He wore no nametag or rank insignia, but he didn't need any. Not only had we all seen his official announcements on Ares internal Matrix channels and training videos, but his picture was hanging in the front lobby of every Knight Errant corporate facility right next to Damien Knight's.
"As you were." the man said as he stepped up to the briefer's podium, and we all immediately resumed our seats.
"Good morning, troopers." Roger Soaring Owl, the CEO of Knight Errant Security Services, greeted us all. "You are here today to be given your first introduction to an operational concept that we have been working on for some time. This will be a joint Ares-UCAS operation underneath the overall command of General Welles, the UCAS forces commander for the Containment Zone." One of the blank viewscreens switched to a standard org-chart diagram explaining exactly who would be giving the orders by what authority, both for the client and for Ares internally - which was a fairly typical thing for Knight Errant given that we were ultimately all PMCs, but which we'd never before seen on this scale. "The Knight Errant senior officer on this operation will be Major General Tanner, who you all see off to my immediate left." The two-star I'd seen up on stage nodded his head on cue.
"And now, to the heart of the matter." Soaring Owl smiled a thin CEO smile at us, clearly visible on the viewscreen close-up. "Barring unforeseen circumstances, at 0000 hours on 22 February 2058 we intend to launch Operation Extermination. This operation will be a massive combined-arms attack on all fronts into the Chicago Containment Zone... and its objective will be the permanent destruction of every single remaining insect spirit inside the Wall."
Author's Note: Old Shadowrun grognards already knew that the Bug City arc would not be the entire fanfic just from the dates, as the canon date of Operation Extermination was indeed February 22nd, 2058. But the fic was never going to be just about stomping bugs in Chicago. After all, there's a whole wide world out there!