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Veni, Vidi, (Re)aedificavi "I Came, I saw, I (Re)built" (A Commissioned Battletech Isekei)

Chapter 27 New
Chapter 27

Date: December 5, 3028
Location: Kalidasa, Free Worlds League

One of the benefits to having been a tech guy and starting out in that industry before founding my own business was that I'd done my best to stick to my roots and remember where I'd started out from. No, the computers here weren't the 'modern' computers I was used to, but they were just as good in their own way, and when I'd learned to interface them with the operating system I'd created, we were able to narrow down what had caused the issue with the large laser line.

The problem was, just because we knew what was wrong with it, didn't mean we had an easy way to fix it. Even with the ability to tell what was wrong with it didn't magically make me a wizard at this.

In fact, the problem was specifically that one of our guys who regularly worked the line noticed something off with some of our ratios. He'd fixed that. But just like coding, fixing something that was working broke half a dozen other things. So, Susannah and I'd spent the last month and change running around fixing one problem or another.

"I think that was the last fix," Susannah appeared from a nearby hole where she'd been working on one of the latest machines, grease covered her face, gloved hands, and coveralls. It looked like something had gone majorly wrong before she fixed it. But she'd stuck it out with me and I appreciated it.

"Is everything put back together?" I asked. I didn't want to turn this on and have to fix it again.

"Yes," She sighed exhaustedly. "I'm glad we're documenting all of this, because I might murder someone if we have to do this again."

"As long as it's not me, feel free," I felt much the same, and I turned to the panel that would start the process and manufacture a handful of Large Lasers so we could check to make sure everything worked. "Ready to start it up?"

"Everyone ready for a line test?" Susannah asked into her radio. A series of confirmations answered her and she just nodded at me. "Start it up, boss."

Turning to the massively overbuilt control panel, I turned the key and powered it on, waiting for it to go through it's startup procedures one at a time. For someone who had become used to the speed and advances of the 21st century, it felt like it crawled on for a long time. In reality, five minutes wasn't a long time for a machine like this to finish its checks.

When the light on the panel winked green, I flipped the lever that started the factory line. Now it was time for Susannah and I to step back and let the people who mained this line do their job while we waited to see if everything worked out or not.

"I'm buying breakfast," I nudged Susannah out of her weird state. "What do you want?"

"Waffle house," Susannah instantly replied, wiping the grease off her hands and face with the shop towels we had outside of the locker rooms. "I'll meet you upstairs."

"Sounds good," I nodded, and we split up to our respective locker rooms to get cleaned up and changed. We'd spent most of the night finishing the repairs, and while neither of us were off the clock yet, we did need to take a break and get some food and caffeine into us.

The locker room looked exactly like it sounded. We knew that employees might get gross while working for us, so we'd had coveralls and locker rooms put in place so that people could go home clean.

Taking a quick shower, I pulled on a pair of jeans and a t-shirt that didn't smell too bad. When you'd spent the last month living at a factory, your sense of smell was a bit jacked up.

Then I took the elevator up to the lobby and nodded as I saw Susannah, she had the desk phone to her ear and held up a finger over her mouth as she finished speaking.

"Yeah, we're going to be at Waffle House. Love you, bye!" she hung up the phone with a sharp 'click'. "Sorry, I was letting my fiance know where I was going to be and who I was with."

"Understandable," I replied, looking at the time. I hadn't realized it was the evening shift instead of the morning shift that we'd handed the line over to. "Anyway, I'm starving."

"Me too," Susannah said, and we headed out towards the parking lot for my beater truck. "I still don't know why you drive this old thing, you make enough that you could have something newer."

"It works," I replied, rolling down the windows because the AC didn't work. "Besides, I'm at work or at home, where would I drive to in said fancy car?"

"To Rebecca's place," Susannah offered. "She and I do talk, you know."

"My truck goes to her place just fine," I retorted, pulling out of the lot and onto the road. The Waffle House was a few miles away. It was actually one of the most shocking things I'd discovered about living in the world of Mechwarrior V. Coca Cola, Pepsi, and a handful of soft drinks had made it into the far future. But McDonalds, Wendy's, a bunch of the big chains hadn't made it, or were still only on Terra. Waffle House, on the other hand, with their eye toward every restaurant being prepared for anything had dominated the marketing and there was probably at least one in every big city across the Inner Sphere and Periphery.

The buildings were still built the same as they always were back on Earth, but now they were made with materials that could withstand a nuclear blast. Inside, it still felt like a 1950s diner, a small Fusion engine powered the place, and a well directly underneath meant that each Waffle House on every world would endure beyond anything else.

Just like back home, the fights were exaggerated too. Unless you were at a Waffle House at four in the morning, you never saw anything other than people wanting breakfast. At four in the morning, you definitely could see some crazy characters, though.

Sitting down, the waitress took our orders and we waited for the carbs, grease, caffeine, and sugar to be brought to our table.

"So, do you think we finally got it?" Susannah asked, sipping at her cup of black coffee.

"I certainly hope so," I sighed, rubbing my eyes as I felt the last twelve hours catch up to me. "I was hoping to stockpile more lasers for the Phoenix. But now it looks like we're going to be scrambling just to keep up with our contracted buyers."

One of the things that we and pretty much every other weapons manufacturer did in the Inner Sphere was offer up spare weapons capacity for sale as a separate thing. What we didn't need for our internal production was very quickly sold on the markets to mercs, the militia, and the Federal Military. At a little over a hundred thousand C-Bills per laser, we'd been raking in the extra and using it to fund the expansion projects like the Phoenix and the Mercury we were working on with Skobel.

Without that line working, we'd had to sell our stockpile to fulfil our contractual obligations while also keeping some in reserve to finish out the Mackies that we were selling. Now we might have to buy some external lasers to fill in the gaps while getting everything squared away for our production needs.

"We should build a second line," Susannah said after finishing her cup and gesturing for a refill. "It'll take a while, but we've documented everything enough after taking the whole thing apart that we could make another one. It'd just take time."

"Where would we put it?" I asked and then thanked the waitress as she set down our plates of food. "We're almost maxed out on the space we built out as it is."

"Add it to a part of the Mercury factory," She shrugged. "It's not like they've added the buildings yet, they're still working on the underground part. If we get started soon enough, we might have the parts for a new large laser line built out by the time Skobel's ready to bring in their experts."

"Do a writeup for it," I cut a bite off of my waffle and savored the carbs and sugar. "I'll review it with Billy, Sylvie, and Eddie once the latter two get back with our industrialmech lines. If it makes sense, I'll make you manager of it and you can head up the entire project."

I'm sure if we werent' so tired, Susannah would have been smiling, but the more she dug into her food, the more tired she seemed to get.

"Finish up," I told her. "I'll call your fiance to come get you. I think you're done for the day."

She just nodded, finishing her food and pushing her plate away from her face before resting her head on her arms.

I took a little bit longer to finish eating, but when I did, I didn't have the heart to wake up Susannah, instead, I asked if I could use Waffle House's phone.

They let me, and I retook my seat after paying the bill and waited for Susannah's fiance to come pick her up and take her home. She'd worked hard enough, she deserved a break.

After Roger had picked her up in his arms and carried her to his car, I waved and headed for my truck. It was time to see if there were any problems with our fixed Large Laser line…






Date: December 24, 3028
Location: Dropship Big Bertha, Kalidasa spaceport

"Look," the Free Worlds League official sighed. "I'd like to approve and wave you on through to offload this equipment, but I'm required to hold anything that was used for agricultural purposes until it's been gone over and inspected for any invasive species that might cause harm to our local ecosystem."

"We're in the middle of the desert!" Sylvie facepalmed. "What local ecosystem are you even talking about? I could understand if we were one of the coastal cities, or even the mountains, but we're transporting industrialmech factory parts that haven't made a new Logging mech in years!"

"The rules are the rules, and the laws don't change just because you're working for the militia," The man crossed his arms across his chest. "You can follow them, or I can impound the dropship and you can wait until a court hearing."

"Fine," Sylvie crossed her arms in return. "How long do we have to wait for an inspection?"

"Given it's the holidays, you'll not be allowed to offload anything from the dropship until sometime in January. Now, I can't tell you when one of our agents will be free. Most of them are on vacation at this point in time."

"Can't you do the inspection and let us go about our business?" Eddie asked, stepping in between the angry Sylvia and the agent of red tape.

"No, I'm not properly certified for it," The man shrugged and handed them a card. "Because you're being cooperative, we'll allow you to relocate the equipment to a warehouse at the spaceport, but it's not allowed to leave the spaceport until an agricultural inspection has been done. Thank you for your attention to this matter."

He then walked over to the next dropship, his clipboard and tie perfectly cementing exactly what he was.

"One day, someone will let me hit one of these self-important idiots," Sylvie grumbled. "On that day, no one will try this sort of shit again."

"You're more likely going to go to jail if you do that," Eddie pointed out. "It's easier to just deal with it if you're not willing to bribe them."

"Bribes work?" Sylvie asked.

"Yes," Eddie nodded. "That's what this man was aiming to receive. A bribe to look past the requirements. Unfortunately, the opportunity has passed and now we must live with the consequences."

"Fuck," Sylvie swore.

"Indeed," Eddie nodded. "We have set back the schedule by several weeks. But we did make it in time for Christmas. So, I will see you later, Miss Sylvie. Enjoy your holidays."

"You too," Sylvie sighed. "You too."
 
Chapter 28 New
Chapter 28

Date: January 3, 3029
Location: Kalidasa, Free Worlds League

It was good to see everyone back in town and celebrating the remainder of the holidays with us. Sylvie and Eddie had done a great job of securing the lines that would become the new MilitiaMech that was the rebuilt Phoenix.

However, there were still some things that Sylvie needed to learn about the world, and hopefully this was one lesson that would stick. While I might despise having to feed corruption, sometimes, most of the time, it was easier to just bypass it by doing what you needed to in the moment before dealing with the source of the corruption later.

A part of me wanted to rush to the Militia and local governments, to call in favors and get my gear back out as fast as possible. The more reasonable and logical part of me knew that having extra time to ensure that our reprogramming was good for the new-to-us factory lines and that our people were trained was more important than setting up the new lines as soon as possible.

The profits from the sale of the Phoenix were going to be good. We'd done some pretesting of the market, and with the 4th Succession War now beginning to take shape, the chance to really make some money was at hand.

Also, the Mercury factory we were constructing with Skobel wasn't going to be ready until next year or the year after depending on construction delays. So, I was going to focus on what we could get running and selling now versus later.

That said, while I was eager to get started, and I knew that the training and prep work was important, I didn't want to burn all of my people out. So, they'd been on a long needed break since the week before Christmas until next week. Which left me at the office in the factory finishing up some final steps before we got started next Monday.


It was mostly housekeeping. Finishing a final audit of payroll and HR to make sure we weren't underpaying our employees, making sure we had copies of the information on how to fix any lines that broke in a similar way to the large laser line we'd just fixed, and doing a handful of things to keep myself busy for the day. I had plans after this to spend the remainder of this week with Rebecca. So, I wanted to make sure I had all of the work prepped and lined up before heading out and forgetting about it for a little while.

Sure, we were probably going to be losing out on a little bit of money by closing down for a little bit. But in the greater scheme of things, we were setting ourselves up for success, and that's what was important.

After finishing up the last of the work I had done, I nodded to the people who I couldn't give the day off to. The security personnel that we'd hired were required to be present at all times. Just like they had been back on Earth before I'd been run over.

Hitting the button to call the elevator, I turned around and looked at the underground section of the factory. Just taking a moment to appreciate just how cool this was. Last I'd checked, not even Elon Musk had built an underground lair for a factory back home, and here I was with an expanded cavern that was about to be responsible for manufacturing the critical components of two different 'mechs.

The Actuators, armor, and a mix of the myomers were made in the topside facilities. Down here, the autocannons, the lasers, and our homebrewed medium blazers were manufactured from raw materials and then assembled into a working skeleton and 'mech up top before they were armored, painted and shipped off.

It almost looked like that scene out of Star Wars where Anakin and Padme were stuck in the droid factories. Only, we had a lot more safety features around and less molten metal to handle outside of some specific parts that were injection molded.

Stepping in the elevator, I took the ride up and stepped into the entryway, the polished crystal armor of the Mackie on display was one of the best things we'd ever done. Jus the tourism from kids wanting to see a real 'mech up close generated a positive feedback loop that might have those kids wanting to grow up and work in factories like mine with their fathers.

What was concealed behind a wall, a security door, and everything else was the finishing and production room. Gantries covered that room, stretching several stories up. It was there that the armor was hung, our factory green paint applied, and the final weapons and fusion reactor testes happened.

It was a shame that I wasn't found to be neurohelmet compatible when we'd tested. Being able to stomp around looked like a ton of fun. Regardless of that though, I was in love with my life in every way that I could be, and was ready for the next challenges that life and Murphy would throw my way.

Just so long as it wasn't another truck. That had sucked…







Date: January 28, 3029
Location: Atreus, Free Worlds League

"What is it this time?" Defense Minister Samuel Stewart asked, resting his head against his desk as one of his secretaries entered the room. "I've already gone through every procurement request the military has put forth. "

"This isn't a request from the Federal side of things, sir," Sharon Webley replied. "This is a request for funds to be allotted to militia units on the Lyran Commonwealth border. They're not even requesting bulk funding for once. More than one of them have specific requests for new 'mechs."

"Who doesn't?" Samuel asked with a scoff. "Billions of Eagles towards purchasing everything everyone can build. There's just not enough to go around. They'll have to settle for tanks like everyone else."

"Minister, you may want to take a look at the request," Sharon responded. "It seems they're not looking to purchase battlemechs, though they probably wouldn't protest it. No, they're manufacturing Militiamechs."

"Militiamechs are a dead end," Samuel shook his head. "They're not viable for combat."

"That's not what the attached report from SAFE and Colonel Lezzhov says," Sharon handed over the request. "I think we should look further into this."

"Fine," Samuel held his hand out for the paper before burying his head in his elbow again. "I'll take a look at it sometime tomorrow. If the proposals are reasonable and the funds are still there, I'll consider it."

"I believe militia units are used to procuring their on means of funding what they require," Samuel sighed. "I'll add it to the stack. "

"That's all they can ask for," Sharon said. "The company mentioned plans to have a light 'mech available."

"If they can add another light 'mech, then they'll be able to get funding from some grants, that's assuming they aren't already getting money from Federal Grants that are available," Samuel stroked at his goatee. "Does the paperwork specify what 'mech they're going to be manufacturing?"

"The Mercury," Sharon replied. "They apparently managed to wrangle a license and some assistance out of them and are going to go public with the first ones off the factory floor in 3031. SAFE has made their full briefing available to us."
"Any response from other defense manufacturing plants?" Samuel flipped through the pages, skimming as if to glean the secrets of the universe.

"Nothing yet," the secretary shrugged. "According to SAFE, Corean's apparently paying attention to what they're doing and working on reviving an older design, or are looking into licensing it to some industrialmech manufacturers."

"What design would that be?" Sam raised an eyebrow. "This Siler's Salvage and Assembly seems to be using designs from the defunct Hegemony and Rim Worlds Republic. This Mackie and Phoenix appear to be sufficient to stave off pirates or assist in retaining worlds, but not much more than that."

"The Sarissa," Sharon handed over another document. "It's a 'mech design that originated around the same time frame as the others you just named. Corean doesn't seem to be concerned with making the design themselves, and are handing out licenses for it to a handful of industrialmech manufacturers to take advantage of the new market that Siler's has opened up."

"Forward all of these reports to Taxation and Trade," Samuel sat up and began writing out a list of things he wanted the ministry to start working on. "See if we can free up some more funds to push this agenda. With the Lyrans becoming aggressive again, having battlemechs that are working for the militia replaced by these militiamechs will enable us to have a higher amount of readiness."

Waving Sharon out of his office, Samuel reached for his phone and dialed a number. Listening to it ring before his father answered the phone.

"This is the Defense minister, please connect me to the Earl of Stewart," Samuel stated as the receptionist answered. "Yes, I'll hold."

"Hector speaking."

"Father, we have an opportunity to make money and assist the Free Worlds League simultaneously. You have Janos's ear, and I believe he'll be willing to listen to this."

"I'm listening…"






Date: January 31, 3029
Location: Kalidasa, Free Worlds League

"This shouldn't work," Sylvie said, watching as Eddie picked up the top half of a 50-ton Rifleman RFL-2N they'd bought from a passing merchant with his crane. "We're going to have to recalibrate everything!"
Now that the torso, (missing one half of the gun arm, and the fusion engine) was suspended, they could get to work on cleaning it up, replacing the fusion engine, and stripping weapons out and adding new ones in.

In another gantry beside the first one, there was a set of legs pulled from a Longbow. The 85 tonner had suffered an ammo detonation before being retired to the salvage yard, and they hadn't been able to sell the legs off as of yet.

The thing that made this even worth attempting was the fact that the legs were similar enough between the Warhammer, Longbow, and all three variants of the Rifleman that they all attached to the center torso in much the same way. Allowing for a frankenmech like this to be constructed.

"We have two Donal PPCs that are in need of repair," Eddie said as he stepped back and looked at the half-destroyed 'mech that hadn't been cleaned up yet. " We will replace the stock PPCs with them. Should allow for more heat sinks, armor, and other features."

"I don't think this is going to work the way you think it is," Sylvie chuckled. "But if you're convinced, I've got faith in you."

They had all gotten together and decided that they were going to be at the next Solaris Championships. For that, they needed a good 'mech, a stable on the nearby world, and one helluva mechwarrior to drive the 'mech they made.

All they really needed to do right now was finish the 'mech. Edmund and Rebecca were handling the Stable, and Justin Hammer was reaching out to some of his friends to track down a good pilot.

But first, they needed to actually get this done.

"I'll get the hose," Sylvie sighed. " You work on those PPCs and the connection point. This is crazy, and I hope you're right…"
 
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Chapter 29 New
Chapter 29

Date: March 5, 3029
Location: Kalidasa, Free Worlds League

"So, You said we could make use of anything we had in the storage," Eddy said as he led me into the 'mech bay that he and Sylvie had been working on their Solaris project in. "Well, given we had stowed that batch of freezers, I modified the engine to accept them."

"As long as you left some samples for us, then that's fine," I grunted in response. Sure, it wasn't great that the samples were gone in the first place, but it wasn't the end of the world. We'd managed to salvage something like fifty or so working and not working models out of various 'mechs in the yard. Mostly pulled out of damage fusion engines that we couldn't get working again.

Just having a handful of the various models should let me replicate them given enough time. Right now though, I just wanted to see what they'd managed to do with the junk that was left.

Stepping into the room, the Rifleman didn't look wrong to my native eyes, but to whatever ability this was, something was wrong.

Invalid unit: Construction rules…

I ignored the warning message flagging across the abck of my mind and simply allowed Eddy to explain what he'd done. It seemed that my power, my ability, worked within certain rules and functions.

The real world, on the other hand, didn't work that way. After all, from what I remembered of Mechwarrior Five, you were technically only supposed to put ballistic weapons in ballistic slots, and energy weapons into energy slots. My power didn't seem to care about that. But it did care about this. I didn't really know why, but it was another bit of information I now knew that I hadn't known before.

"Well, you remember that Marauder chassis we wrote off," Eddy asked me.

"Vaguely," I replied, walking up to the legs. "I remember telling all of you that it was more trouble than it was worth to fix and sell it."

"You were right," Eddy chuckled. "The engine was just about the only thing worth salvaging, and it still needed some repairs before we got it working. But, after fixing it, and swapping the engines out, we now had the power to make do with what we had planned. We kept the PPCs and medium lasers from the old 2N, with the freezers, it's ice cold and we now have the weight and tonnage available to do some mighty interesting things. So, I took a page out of the Jagermech and added in a pair of LRM-5s under the PPCs."

I looked at the carefully concealed launchers. It seemed there were plates or something doing the work to try and keep them hidden, and now that I knew what I was lookin for, I spotted similar bits of metal covering bits of both 'shoulders'.

"Solaris is as much a show as it is a test of skill and technology," Eddy said. "We want to be able to send a message in our first bout. Something that the crowd loves. An ace up the sleeves is the perfect thing to bring them in."

"It's a good idea," I leaned back to look at more of the heavy 'mech. "Anything else you did that we'll have to maintain?"

"Well, I wanted to add jump jets," Eddy sheepishly rubbed the back of his head. "But I ran out of space when Sylvie and I started getting creative with the missiles. I could have squeezed them in but then I'd have had to decrease the armor I added. Which would mean less survivability. I could probably still take two tons off to get sixty meters of jump, but I didn't think it would be worth it. If our pilot eventually makes some different decisions, then we can make alterations then."

"How much armor are we talking?" I asked.

"Twelve tons of standard," Eddy slapped the side of the leg. "She should be just as durable as any other heavy 'mech out there."

"Well, if she's ready, then we can prep you and the 'mech for shipping," I told the engineer. "Until we have a full stable of people hired with mechs and pilots to match, you're in charge of this. Hammer got us a line on someone who's been prepping to fight in the medium circuits, and we're going to be backing him. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to establish a stable of mechwarriors, mechtechs, and everything needed for us to support our new representative. I've got a few accountants and others going with you to help, but you're in charge."

Eddy stood there for a second.

"You want me to go to Solaris?" He asked, raising an eyebrow.

"I do," I nodded, crossing my arms and leaning against the frankenmech. "You're a good engineer, you're decent with people, and more importantly, you're trustworthy. I can send you and trust that you'll do your level best until we find someone to replace you if you want."

"No," Eddy shook his head frantically. "I always dreamed of being a tech at Solaris. I just never thought it would actually happen."

"Well," I grinned. "Consider this a dream come true. Also, we're paying for you and your family's housing. Anything you need to get established, we'll take care of it. You just focus on making sure everyone thinks Siler's is one of the best companies that exists in the Inner Sphere."

"You got it," He nodded, meeting my eyes and extending a hand. "I'll make sure Solaris and everyone else knows who's the best."

"It's Defiance, isn't it?" I joked.

"It's Defiance," Eddy admitted. "We're probably not even in the top thirty. But any progress upwards is progress. I won't let any of you down.







Date: March 13, 3029


Our new industrialmech lines had been released from the department of agriculture around the end of January, which had meant that everything was still offline until we tested everything and made sure our tolerances were exactly what we had planned for.

Reprogramming and testing had taken the better part of the last month. But now that it was finished, we were ready to being production on the Phoenix. Even better, if our calculations were right, we would be able to produce approximately two of them per month. With the potential for squeezing in an extra two or three per year if we ran extra shifts.

Sure, it'd take two Phoenix's to match the cost of one Mackie, but our margins were better on the medium mechs. They were cheaper to manufacture, we didn't owe anyone any license fees given the company that used to make the 'mech was defunct, and everything else was done in house. It cost us about one and a half million C-Bill to make a Phoenix. That was the raw materials that went into everything, the labor, and the cost over time to make up the difference on what we spent on the lines in the first place.

We were planning on selling the 'mechs for approximately three million per 'mech. Which would allow us to start rebuilding our reserves and invest more into the Mercury facility. I wanted the debut of our first proper battlemech to go well.

Admittedly, that was still a couple of years away, which left plenty of time for us to pump out as many of our assault and medium MilitiaMechs as was posible and put them out on the market. My hope was that we would eventually be the premier seller for rear echelon forces as well as any militia units in the Free Worlds League.

After all, if there was one thing I remembered about learning World War 2 History, it was that the rear echelon troops were always in need of something slightly less capable than their front line counterparts. Something that was easy to work with, work on, and freed up 'better gear. But they still needed something that could both take and dish out. Our Militiamechs wouldn't ever be the equal of battlmechs matching their weight. But they didn't have to be.

The militiamechs were the M1 Carbine to the frontline's M1 Garands. They performed and they did what was asked of them, occasionally they would be asked to do what an frontline needed, and when that day came, they'd perform it to the best of their ability.

And when someone used the 'mechs in combat, or had to make field modifications in order to keep it going, our warranty would cover it. We'd do the repairs, we'd RMA it. Hell, at this point, if someone brought any variant of the Mackie to us, I'd be willing to honor our warranty. It was more than a sales pitch, it was something that set us apart from the competition. The sort of thing that made people actually notice and remember us.

Right now though, I was filling out the purchasing documents for a small stable on Solaris that had been on the verge of bankruptcy. We'd swooped in and bought them along with the adjoining house and property for Eddie and his family.

Getting things ready for Solaris was a lot of paperwork. I'd had to do a lot of correspondence via the HPG and Comstar over the last few weeks. I'd had to register us as a sponsor, find the property we needed, find a stable that was going out, and then I'd had to figure out how to get in touch with the people selling the property, then how to purchase it.

It'd taken a lot of long hours sitting at the local Comstar Station talking to the oddly robed adepts to figure out how all of it worked. Oddly enough, Comstar reminded me of the Jedi Order in a lot of ways. Only they worshiped technology instead of using the Force. The gray robes, the 'supposed' neutrality, everything just rubbed me a bit wrong. Sure, there was obviously big money in retaining a monopoly on the entire telecom system for a galaxy. But something didn't math right in my head with how their prices worked and how much they claimed it cost to maintain the system.

That was all before I'd glimpsed an HPG and nearly passed out like I used to from seeing a dropship. Thankfully, all the time I'd spent learning how to ignore the things my power couldn't work with came in handy, and I'd ended up finishing those Q&A sessions with nothing more than a major headache.

But now that Sylvie's and my signature had been added, we were going to be a part of the sponsors for the next Solaris championship later this year.

"Edmund," Susannah poked her head into the room. "If you're done with the purchasing agreements, I can take them down to the HPG to get them sent off."

"That'd be great," I restacked them neatly before sliding them into a large envelope, sealing it, and handing it to my assistant. "Anything else I need to be worried about?"

"Yeah, the mechwarrior that Hammer got into contact with is here," She replied. "He's waiting upstairs, you might want to meet him and see if he's what we're looking for."

"Just have a security guard escort him down," I replied, gesturing towards the paperwork I still had to do for the new Phoenix lines.

"Sounds good," She waved and headed off.

Really, I was reviewing the logs now that the lines had been tested. I didn't want a repeat of the large laser lines to happen to anything. So, I had to print everything out and go over it.

Pencil in hand, I began to go over line by line of code and reports, continuing until I heard a knock on the door and a man stepping into my office.

"Thanks for meeting with me," the young man sheepishly smiled.

"Let's talk about your future, Duncan Fisher…"
 
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