by M. D. Cooper
she asked her team a few minutes later.
Kelly replied with a laugh.
Niki shot back.
Goob reported.
Kelly replied.
Shoshin said a few seconds later.
Fiona laughed in response.
Rika was about to leave the platform to help Shoshin’s team when Niki flashed an updated log entry on her HUD.
Shit.
The Van asked.
Rika assured him.
Kelly snorted.
Cole allowed.
Kelly retorted.
Rika shook her head as she turned and loped across the platform. She reached out to Chase on the command net.
he replied.
Rika nodded absently as she sent a pair of drones down the passageway at the end of the platform.
Rika smiled to herself as she rushed down the corridor in the wake of her drones, reaching a lift that would take her down the two levels.
She sent a drone in to activate the conveyance, and lobbed a grenade inside before the doors closed. She set the drone to detonate the explosive the moment the doors opened on the lower level. No staircase provided an alternate route down, but there was an access shaft with a ladder a few meters away.
As the lift descended, Rika pulled a panel off the shaft and jumped inside, certain that the Niets would not have had time to secure it against her advance.
She was halfway down to the lower level when it turned out that she was only half right.
A soldier eased into view below her and fired up at Rika as she fell. She didn’t have a good angle with either of her rifles, so she weathered the barrage, rounds chipping away at her armor, until her three-clawed feet were in range, and she clamped one on the Niet’s head.
Her momentum pulled the soldier into the shaft and finally provided Rika with a good firing angle for her GNR. A trio of kinetic rounds burst from the weapon’s muzzle and tore the enemy’s shoulder off.
The Niet screamed as he fell, and Rika sent a few more rounds his way to make sure he wouldn’t come back up.
She caught the edge of the opening onto the lower deck and was pulling herself up into the corridor when the lift doors opened and the grenade exploded. She saw a body fly past, and used the distraction to leap out and fall prone in the passageway, firing with her AC9CR rifle at a stunned-looking enemy soldier a few meters ahead.
Another Nietzschean was on her left, clearly dead, and Rika turned away, sending out a fresh pair of drones to scout ahead as she rose.
The drones barely stayed ahead of her as she loped down the hundred meters of twisting passages, no further enemies in evidence until she caught sight of the bay.
She slowed her pace, triggering her armor to shed heat and resume full stealth before she approached. Her drones ranged closer and gave her a view of two soldiers standing next to the ramp while the colonel paced back and forth in front of it.
Niki commented as the colonel stopped and shook his head, cursing before he resumed wearing a groove in the deck.
Rika replied as she quietly walked into the bay, taking care to move silently across the grated deck.
Rika was surprised at Niki’s suggestion.
She paused, wondering why she had in fact leapt to that conclusion.
Niki almost shouted the denial.
Rika felt herself redden.
The AI laughed.
Rika crept up to the pacing colonel, stopping just a meter from the point where he turned, and reached out, flicking a small blob of infiltration nano onto his back during his next passage.
Niki said as she got to work.
Rika muttered.
The colonel spun, his eyes searching the bay, and Rika froze—though she knew there was no way he could see her. A second later, something hit her in the back, and she swore, realizing she’d been hit by a gel bomb, the sticky substance ruining her stealth.
Niki said.
“Dammit. How’d you spot me?” Rika asked the colonel, noting that both the soldiers had raised their rifles, though curiously hadn’t yet fired.
I wonder if they know I’ll drop them before they get a second round off.
“Not about to share that with a mech,” the colonel said. “I take it you’re not my courier.”
Niki supplied.
The idea that the Niets might have figured out a way to outsmart ISF stealth tech set Rika’s nerves on edge, but only solidified her desire to take the colonel alive so she could learn how he’d managed it.
“Well, I have a message for you, does that count?” she asked him.
“Not really, no,” the Nietzschean replied. “You’re an SMI, from what I can see of you. Not Rika herself, by any chance, are you?”
Something in his voice told her that she’d best keep her cards close to her chest, and she shook her head. “No such luck—well, luck for you, I suppose. She might just kill you. I have orders to capture.”
“You’re going to find that a bit hard,” the man said, and Rika found herself wondering what reason he had for such a high level of confidence.
She decided to remove his options, and two bursts fired from her GNR, tearing the two guards’ arms off, sending the soldiers to the deck while their weapons spun away.
The colonel appeared nonplussed. “Brutal, just like all your kind.”
She didn’t rise to the bait, instead nodding at his sidearm. “Your weapon. Drop it.”
The Nietzschean shrugged and pulled his weapon free, tossing it away.