on the ground and prepare to be taken into custody or you will be fired upon.'

Mitchell took a moment to digest these words and then keyed up his radio. 'All teams,' he said into his microphone. 'We need some assistance in here! We're getting resistance from...'

'Your radios are being jammed,' Warren said matter-of-factly. 'We have dampers set up all around the edges of the lobby and set to your frequency.'

Mitchell wanted to disbelieve his words but the lack of response on the channel kept him from doing so. He looked around, seeing the stunned, nervous faces of his men. He didn't know what to do. He had never been faced with a situation such as this before. He was a federal agent! People feared him. They didn't attempt to take him hostage. The very idea was absurd!

'There is no need for this to come to violence,' Warren told him. 'Drop your weapons and surrender. You will be held here in the capital for the duration of this little crisis and you will be treated well. If you don't, however, my men will be forced to take you down by force. Go the easy way, Mitchell. Let's keep this thing civilized.'

It might have ended peacefully. Mitchell was just about to order his men to do as they were told, knowing that the guard would probably not be bluffing about what he was saying. After all, he had looked into Whiting's security force himself when he'd been examining the possibilities of arranging an assassination. But special agent Brackford, the youngest member of the team, had other thoughts on the matter. At only twenty-eight years of age and an appointee to the FLEB by virtue of family connections instead of ability, Brackford was known for his short temper and impulsive actions. These were traits which had earned him reprimands in the past and that would now cost him much more than a black mark on his file. Outraged that the greenies would actually threaten federal agents carrying out their duties, he took matters into his own hands.

'Fuck you, greenie!' he yelled arrogantly. Before Mitchell could stop him he raised his M-24 and pointed it at the guard booth. It is doubtful that the shots would have penetrated the glass, but they never got a chance to find out.

Flashes appeared from four different directions followed by the harsh popping of M-24s. Brackford's head rocked back and forth as two of the rounds slammed into his helmet, drilling through into his skull. The other two slammed into his chest, penetrating with ease through the Kevlar of his armor vest. He dropped to the carpeted lobby without even firing a shot.

The reaction from the rest of the agents was ill advised but instinctive. They raised their weapons and turned towards the flashes they'd seen, opening fire. From all around the lobby, from behind plants, behind staircases, behind counters, gunfire and bright flashes erupted. Bullets streaked across the lobby in both directions, the ones fired from FLEB guns striking the walls and the windows and the solid objects that the MPG troops were using as cover, the ones fired by the security force finding chests and heads and legs. Agents screamed and thumped to the ground as the supersonic rounds ripped into them. Warren had planned his takedown well. There was nowhere for the agents to find cover, nowhere for them to run. Mitchell himself managed to trigger off a single burst towards the staircase before he felt his chest peppered with hammer blows and his feet were suddenly refusing to hold him up. He dropped to the ground, blood now running from his mouth, his eyes looking at the carpet against his face, his mind wondering just what the hell had happened.

'Goddamn it!' Warren yelled, opening his booth door and stepping out into the lobby. His orders had been to take the FLEB agents without gunfire if possible. The young hotheaded agent had made this impossible. Now all ten of them were laid out on the carpet, only two of them showing any signs of life whatsoever. The Martian red carpet beneath them was soaking up the blood and turning a darker shade.

'Second and third platoon,' he said into his radio link as he walked carefully towards the pile of FLEB agents, 'we've made contact. Move in and secure the outside forces.' Both of the platoon commanders acknowledged his orders. He then asked for a status report on his own men. 'Anyone hurt?' he asked the group at large.

None of them answered up, which meant that either all of them were dead or none of them had been hit. Logic favored the latter. 'Get down here and secure these idiots,' he ordered. 'Medics, start sorting through them.'

From all around the room his platoon emerged, all of them dressed in battle gear, all of them pointing their weapons at the FLEB agents.

'Get those weapons secured,' he ordered. 'Move the dead off towards the back of the room, move the living towards the doors so we can get some dip-hoes in here to pick them up.'

'Warren,' came Jackson's voice over the link. 'What the hell's going on down there? Give me a status report!'

'The lobby is secure, General,' Warren told him, watching as his men went to work disarming and securing. 'They went the hard way. All ten are down and we're sorting through them right now. All of my people are uninjured. The outside forces should be moving in as we speak.'

'Copy that, Warren,' Jackson responded, a hint of regret in his voice. 'I'm sure it was unavoidable.'

'It was,' he confirmed.

'Mark this moment, son,' he said. 'Your platoon has just fired the first shots of the revolution. Let's make sure that they weren't in vain, shall we?'

'Yes sir.'

The FLEB agents standing by outside heard the gunfire from the lobby of course. More than forty M-24 assault rifles firing on full automatic made a considerable amount of noise. They also heard the silence on the airwaves when they tried to contact their companions. Instinctively the four groups of them rushed to whatever entrance they were guarding to try and lend assistance. In each case the entrance in question was closed and locked, inaccessible to anyone without a cutting torch or some primacord.

The Internet camera crews, who had set up shop across the street, had heard the gunfire as well and had actually transmitted the entire gun battle live on the air as it unfolded with the assistance of digital zoom and infrared enhancement. Perversely enough, the camera crews and the few people on Mars that were actually watching the big three at the moment (less than three percent of the Martian viewers, the computers would later reveal) knew the fate of the FLEB agents inside the building long before their companions.

It was while the FLEB agents were peering through the thick glass, trying to get a look inside to see what the situation was that the two MPG platoons swarmed out of their hiding places, weapons ready for action. Each platoon had split into two elements, which gave twenty soldiers to cover each side of the building. The FLEB agents never even heard them coming until it was far too late.

'MPG! Everyone freeze!' yelled the leaders of each element as they positioned themselves behind what cover they could find.

Most of the agents took one look at what they were facing and complied with the order, knowing that to do otherwise would be futile. A few hotheads of the Brackford variety however, did make the mistake of trying to resist capture. On the south side of the building, against the side entrance, a five-year member of the FLEB made what he thought was a quick spin towards the enemy behind him. He made it less than halfway around before five rifles cracked out three-round bursts of high velocity bullets at him. All fifteen shots hit within a half a second of each other, ripping through every major organ in his chest. He collapsed to the ground, a bloody, twisted mess. On the west side, next to the main entrance, another agent, this one a twelve-year veteran, tried diving down to the ground to make himself a smaller target. This he was able to accomplish but before he could bring his weapon to bear nine bullets smashed into his face, exploding his skull into three separate pieces. On the east side of the building an agent that had once been a corporal in the WestHem army actually managed to turn and get a single shot off. His bullet passed neatly between two MPG members and buried itself in the steel of the building across the street. The unfortunate agent was then plastered by more than sixty rounds as the entire line of infantry troops fired at him.

Any cute ideas that the rest of the agents might have had about resistance or escape disappeared at this point. They threw their weapons to the ground and allowed themselves to be restrained with their own handcuffs. Before their radios were removed however, most of them managed to squeak out pleas for assistance from the main office.

Once disarmed and secured they were marched inside the nearest entrance where they got a good look at what had become of their fellow agents that had gone in to make the arrest. Seething with hatred, rage, and fear, they were led down a stairway and into the building's basement where they would be placed under guard.

With the outside threat taken care of, the two platoons of infantry pulled inside the building, leaving the

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