April 27th 2025
Just inside the border of Taniland
African Continent
The DC-3 transport plane was probably - no, definitely - older than all of the people aboard. It rattled, banged and creaked, and the interior was so loud, there was no way for the operators of Spearhead to talk to one another as it flew, even with their radio headsets. Sat on nylon webbing seats along the inside of the fuselage, their gear was in a small pile of hard-impact peli cases and bags between them, strapped down to the cabin floor.
The note of the rumbling twin piston engines changed and the ancient DC-3 rumbled as its' landing gear came down. Craning her neck to look through the porthole behind her, Meg peered over the top of her shades at the outside. The ground grew close; reddish dirt and plentiful green vegetation loomed up, broken by the occasional rocky outcrop and winding ribbon of water. There were vague hints of civilisation; unpaved roads cutting through the greenery and the occasional simple building of unclear purpose, and then it was lost behind the treeline as the DC-3's wheels touched down with a rumbling roar, and the props joined it as they went into reverse to slow down. The tail came down, tilting the cabin as the plane slowed enough to land, and the noise dropped away as they came to a stop.
The co-pilot picked their way past the seated operators, nodding to them and pointing to their seatbelts, before he undogged the hatch in the side of the fuselage and heaved out a set of steps. The dusty, earthy smell of the outdoors invaded the cabin, interfacing with the musty, artificial smell of the ancient plane.
Meg gestured to the others to handle the gear, and for one of the others to come with her as she dropped down the steps, and into the dying heat of the early evening. The roar of the DC-3's engines had died to a low hum as they idled, and the plane was unloaded.
Standing close by, and somehow managing to look almost immaculate despite their surroundings in a white dress shirt, jeans and a suit jacket was Jamison, the team's handler and contact. A short way behind her a minibus was parked up with the doors open and waiting.
"Welcome to Taniland, Spearhead Team," she said over the sound of the engines. "Glad you made it in one piece"
"No thanks to the transport arrangements," Meg said back, shaking hands with the slightly taller, more slender woman. "The pilot was great, but I think to keep that thing in the air, he'd have to be. I'm pretty sure that DC-3 was probably over Normandy, and hasn't been serviced since".
"It was inconspicuous, and at short notice," she replied with a shrug. "And it got you here, that's all that mattered, right?"
Megan acceded with a shrug, looking back to the plane as their gear was being unloaded.
"I won't argue with that," she said with a nod, before nodding back to the pile of their gear. "I assume you've got a place for us to go? And that we won't have time to sit around long, either"
Jamison shook her head, face falling into more of a grimace. "I've got several safehouses set up across the region, in association with the local resistance. I've made sure there's multiple points, and they'll be safe enough for you to use to sleep, eat, and rest otherwise, as well as store your gear. And as for getting you right into it; as long as you're ready to go, I can get you out there right away".
Megan looked back at her team and her lips wrinkled. "We'll see; once we've got the gear on the bus and are away from the strip, we can get a better idea".
***
A short while later, the bus was loaded up and the plane clawing its' way back into the darkening sky. Jamison put the vehicle into gear, and it moved off down the rutted, bumpy road. She talked loud enough for the whole team to hear as they moved.
"So the situation on the ground is that the Order are definitely in charge. Taniland's military and police forces are basically owned by them and at their beck and call, and they essentially own the government too, through payoffs, bribes, blackmail and all the usual methods. Most of the civilian population are stuck working here for them, whether they like it or not, and open dissent is very harshly punished. Worship of their fucked-up ideals isn't enforced per se, but it's... highly encouraged. There is a resistance movement, but they're underfunded, under-equipped, and are on the back foot. That's why we're here; to give them a boost and try and help them get on the right path"
The blonde fished in the door pocket on her side, before pulling out a file jacket and passing it over to Meg, the kiwi flipping through it, before passing it back for the others to look through.
"That's the dossier on Thomas Adebayo. He's one of the Resistance chief officers. While he's not their primary field leader, he is their top point of relations with the local population. Well educated, local boy, from a family with a strong history of helping the local people. He was running for office before the Order took over". Jamison took her eyes off the road for a moment to glance across at Megan, who returned the look, the minibus turning onto a more finished road surface, other traffic - sparse as it was - starting to appear around them, along with telephone poles lining the sides of the road.
"...He was taken into custody by the police in the town of Mbaiki, this morning, and then transferred to a compound in the village of Boukoko. Getting him out would be a perfect first step for us in establishing a good contact with the Resistance, and it would show the Order we mean business as well. Freeing prisoners from what has been, until now, a place that couldn't attacked and dealing them actual damage would send a clear message. Not to mention, there's bound to be intel on their operations in the local area as well that would be worth getting our hands on, and other assets we could seize that would be worth putting in our hands, or those of the resistance fighters".
Meg leant back against the sweat-sticky seat of the minibus and nodded, pushing her shades up onto her head now that the sun had died away into twilight. A village loomed ahead, lights breaking up the purplish haze of the encroaching night.
"Sounds like time is a factor here; the longer we wait, the longer they'll have to try and pull more out of him. Or transfer him somewhere harder for us to reach him. How far is this place from here?"
"About twenty minutes drive. There's a safehouse here too".
Meg considered, and then shuffled around in her seat to look back at the others.
"All right. We de-bus, unpack our shit, get chow and then get our heads together. No time to get into things like the present, right?"
Just inside the border of Taniland
African Continent
The DC-3 transport plane was probably - no, definitely - older than all of the people aboard. It rattled, banged and creaked, and the interior was so loud, there was no way for the operators of Spearhead to talk to one another as it flew, even with their radio headsets. Sat on nylon webbing seats along the inside of the fuselage, their gear was in a small pile of hard-impact peli cases and bags between them, strapped down to the cabin floor.
The note of the rumbling twin piston engines changed and the ancient DC-3 rumbled as its' landing gear came down. Craning her neck to look through the porthole behind her, Meg peered over the top of her shades at the outside. The ground grew close; reddish dirt and plentiful green vegetation loomed up, broken by the occasional rocky outcrop and winding ribbon of water. There were vague hints of civilisation; unpaved roads cutting through the greenery and the occasional simple building of unclear purpose, and then it was lost behind the treeline as the DC-3's wheels touched down with a rumbling roar, and the props joined it as they went into reverse to slow down. The tail came down, tilting the cabin as the plane slowed enough to land, and the noise dropped away as they came to a stop.
The co-pilot picked their way past the seated operators, nodding to them and pointing to their seatbelts, before he undogged the hatch in the side of the fuselage and heaved out a set of steps. The dusty, earthy smell of the outdoors invaded the cabin, interfacing with the musty, artificial smell of the ancient plane.
Meg gestured to the others to handle the gear, and for one of the others to come with her as she dropped down the steps, and into the dying heat of the early evening. The roar of the DC-3's engines had died to a low hum as they idled, and the plane was unloaded.
Standing close by, and somehow managing to look almost immaculate despite their surroundings in a white dress shirt, jeans and a suit jacket was Jamison, the team's handler and contact. A short way behind her a minibus was parked up with the doors open and waiting.
"Welcome to Taniland, Spearhead Team," she said over the sound of the engines. "Glad you made it in one piece"
"No thanks to the transport arrangements," Meg said back, shaking hands with the slightly taller, more slender woman. "The pilot was great, but I think to keep that thing in the air, he'd have to be. I'm pretty sure that DC-3 was probably over Normandy, and hasn't been serviced since".
"It was inconspicuous, and at short notice," she replied with a shrug. "And it got you here, that's all that mattered, right?"
Megan acceded with a shrug, looking back to the plane as their gear was being unloaded.
"I won't argue with that," she said with a nod, before nodding back to the pile of their gear. "I assume you've got a place for us to go? And that we won't have time to sit around long, either"
Jamison shook her head, face falling into more of a grimace. "I've got several safehouses set up across the region, in association with the local resistance. I've made sure there's multiple points, and they'll be safe enough for you to use to sleep, eat, and rest otherwise, as well as store your gear. And as for getting you right into it; as long as you're ready to go, I can get you out there right away".
Megan looked back at her team and her lips wrinkled. "We'll see; once we've got the gear on the bus and are away from the strip, we can get a better idea".
***
A short while later, the bus was loaded up and the plane clawing its' way back into the darkening sky. Jamison put the vehicle into gear, and it moved off down the rutted, bumpy road. She talked loud enough for the whole team to hear as they moved.
"So the situation on the ground is that the Order are definitely in charge. Taniland's military and police forces are basically owned by them and at their beck and call, and they essentially own the government too, through payoffs, bribes, blackmail and all the usual methods. Most of the civilian population are stuck working here for them, whether they like it or not, and open dissent is very harshly punished. Worship of their fucked-up ideals isn't enforced per se, but it's... highly encouraged. There is a resistance movement, but they're underfunded, under-equipped, and are on the back foot. That's why we're here; to give them a boost and try and help them get on the right path"
The blonde fished in the door pocket on her side, before pulling out a file jacket and passing it over to Meg, the kiwi flipping through it, before passing it back for the others to look through.
"That's the dossier on Thomas Adebayo. He's one of the Resistance chief officers. While he's not their primary field leader, he is their top point of relations with the local population. Well educated, local boy, from a family with a strong history of helping the local people. He was running for office before the Order took over". Jamison took her eyes off the road for a moment to glance across at Megan, who returned the look, the minibus turning onto a more finished road surface, other traffic - sparse as it was - starting to appear around them, along with telephone poles lining the sides of the road.
"...He was taken into custody by the police in the town of Mbaiki, this morning, and then transferred to a compound in the village of Boukoko. Getting him out would be a perfect first step for us in establishing a good contact with the Resistance, and it would show the Order we mean business as well. Freeing prisoners from what has been, until now, a place that couldn't attacked and dealing them actual damage would send a clear message. Not to mention, there's bound to be intel on their operations in the local area as well that would be worth getting our hands on, and other assets we could seize that would be worth putting in our hands, or those of the resistance fighters".
Meg leant back against the sweat-sticky seat of the minibus and nodded, pushing her shades up onto her head now that the sun had died away into twilight. A village loomed ahead, lights breaking up the purplish haze of the encroaching night.
"Sounds like time is a factor here; the longer we wait, the longer they'll have to try and pull more out of him. Or transfer him somewhere harder for us to reach him. How far is this place from here?"
"About twenty minutes drive. There's a safehouse here too".
Meg considered, and then shuffled around in her seat to look back at the others.
"All right. We de-bus, unpack our shit, get chow and then get our heads together. No time to get into things like the present, right?"