[ They're already a target. They don't know if their enemy was from a rival faction -- or on the Syndicate's payroll. And the only time it's rational to divide a force is when either its components retain a significant force advantage over the enemy, or enjoy other attributes, like mobility or communications, that negate any force advantage that the enemy might have. It's not feasible to divide a two-person team into one-man units that are subject to defeat in detail. This is what scouts or guerrilla forces are for -- and they don't have the luxury of either. It's not Heaven's War. ]
[ Quietly, ]
We have no intelligence. Or mutually supporting positions. Not until we're sure who those thugs were working for. [If you can achieve mobility, split up. Otherwise stay close. Amber's rule of thumb during battles. Ironic, that even after her betrayal, her advice has rarely failed him. ] Right now we should get to a secondary safehouse.
no subject
Odds are better if we stick together.
[ They're already a target. They don't know if their enemy was from a rival faction -- or on the Syndicate's payroll. And the only time it's rational to divide a force is when either its components retain a significant force advantage over the enemy, or enjoy other attributes, like mobility or communications, that negate any force advantage that the enemy might have. It's not feasible to divide a two-person team into one-man units that are subject to defeat in detail. This is what scouts or guerrilla forces are for -- and they don't have the luxury of either. It's not Heaven's War. ]
[ Quietly, ]
We have no intelligence. Or mutually supporting positions. Not until we're sure who those thugs were working for. [If you can achieve mobility, split up. Otherwise stay close. Amber's rule of thumb during battles. Ironic, that even after her betrayal, her advice has rarely failed him. ] Right now we should get to a secondary safehouse.